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Settings for amp

Posted: 27 Feb 2006 10:22 am
by Bill Baseman
I have a DC 3 Mesa Boogie amp. I use it to play guitar and with my PSG. It is the amp I have to use. Any suggestions on settings for a better sound for PSG. It has a clean channel and "lead" channel. Gain, bass, treble, mid, presence and reverb. I know my ability to play PSG is the most important thing for tone but I was hoping someone could give some hints on amp settings. I am looking for a classic or older country sound.

Thanks,
Bill

Posted: 27 Feb 2006 9:28 pm
by Dave Grafe
BIll, I haven't tried the Mesa amp for PSG but I can give you a few generic pointers:

Obviously you will want to take it real easy on the front end and get your power from the power amp end for maximum clean headroom.

As far as EQ goes, Start with your lows and highs straight up 12 o'clock and take a big (-12 to -15) cut out of the mids (if the filter center is at 300 to 400 Hz). Pump up presence to taste. Since you don't have a sweepable mid EQ you will have to experiment a bit more but this is a good starting point for a ShoBud or Emmons guitar to get the classic old country pedal steel sound that it sounds like you are after.<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Dave Grafe on 27 February 2006 at 09:30 PM.]</p></FONT>

Posted: 27 Feb 2006 9:59 pm
by Adam Ollendorff
I have the same exact amp. Forgive my ignorance, but how, with this amp, do you cut the front end and boost the pre-amp signal?

Posted: 28 Feb 2006 3:18 pm
by Dave Grafe
<SMALL>how, with this amp, do you cut the front end and boost the pre-amp signal?</SMALL>
You can't do that, on this or any other amp. The Pre-amp IS the "front end" and as such is generally the part of the circuit designed to produce harmonic distortion by "overdriving" the signal into a non-linear part of the pre-amp's response curve.

On almost any amp you will get the cleanest signal by keeping this input (channel/preamp/front end) gain low and relying the cleaner power amp section - often controlled by a "master" volume knob - to produce most of the amplification.