speaker selection for first 18 watt build
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speaker selection for first 18 watt build
I've gotten lots of info from this community so far as I plan my build based on Richie's 'improved tremolo B' layout. I already have some new Mullard output tubes and Classic Tone output transformer. Haven't selected a speaker (or speakers) yet. I'm building the chassis and probably combo cab myself since I like to build stuff generally. Anyway, I'm interested in good advice about a good 12" speaker to fill this out. I'm thinking a little higher power handling as I'd like maybe a little more headroom. My band does a variety of material from swing to full on rock and I'm looking to add some sound choices for performance and recording. I appreciate your opinions. Bill
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
I looked at your site.
For what you are doing, I wouldn't fit a guitar speaker. You will get better service from a speaker designated for use as a stage monitor or general PA, if you play mandolin through a guitar speaker it can cause ear bleeds, and guitar speakers are not good with acoustic guitars.
For what you are doing, I wouldn't fit a guitar speaker. You will get better service from a speaker designated for use as a stage monitor or general PA, if you play mandolin through a guitar speaker it can cause ear bleeds, and guitar speakers are not good with acoustic guitars.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
Ah - sorry to mislead. I intend to use the amp with a 335 style guitar clean to crunchy sounds. Not with acoustic gtr or mandolin. I've been thinking that a G12H might be good - maybe Preferable to the G12M for clean tones too - but also see some other brands like Weber and Eminence or WGS get good marks here.dotfret wrote:I looked at your site.
For what you are doing, I wouldn't fit a guitar speaker. You will get better service from a speaker designated for use as a stage monitor or general PA, if you play mandolin through a guitar speaker it can cause ear bleeds, and guitar speakers are not good with acoustic guitars.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
I wouldn't worry too much about the speaker wattage rating for headroom. There's a lot of variables that affect headroom, but going with too much speaker wattage only means that you will be removing speaker distortion from the equation entirely with an 18 watt amp.
If you want volume, you need speaker efficiency. The speakers I use from Eminence tend to have a higher efficiency than their counterparts from other brands. The Red Fang has been one of my favorites so far, and it's 103db efficiency, so it's very loud compared to a 97db greenback and its clones.
If you want volume, you need speaker efficiency. The speakers I use from Eminence tend to have a higher efficiency than their counterparts from other brands. The Red Fang has been one of my favorites so far, and it's 103db efficiency, so it's very loud compared to a 97db greenback and its clones.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
Thanks for your advice. There are truly lots of speaker choices out there. I've read good things about Eminence elsewhere, too. I'm thinking more about pairing an Alnico speaker with a ceramic based in part on listening to the retro king stuff online. On this forum I've gleaned that it's good to keep the power rating in the same ballpark with a pairing such as this. I worry that an Alnico alone might be too bright. Sounds like the red fang is nicely balanced. Thanks and I'll post pics as I move through the build a little more.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
Brightness is determined by the speaker design more than just the magnet type. You should look at the frequency response charts generally supplied by the manufacturers for that info. One thing I can tell you is that most people find Vintage 30s to be way too bright with this circuit, and those are ceramic.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
There is too much attention attached to the nature of the magnet when speakers are mentioned. Don't think too much about that, it is how people make money from you.
Guitar speakers have a frequency prominence, they boost the region of frequencies in which guitars make sounds, and that suits most guitarists for playing solos.
If you want to play rhythm most of the time you get a more balanced sound from a PA speaker, it allows a better bass response and is "chunkier" overall.
If you are looking at using two speakers, I would choose a PA / monitor type for one of them, just to get the meat into the sound. But don't get fooled into thinking Alnico V is some kind of magic.
I use old speakers = mostly Goodmans Axiom, because that is what I have. But my dotfret semi sounds just as good through a 10" MacKenzie ceramic, if I mess around with the amp's tone controls.
Guitar speakers have a frequency prominence, they boost the region of frequencies in which guitars make sounds, and that suits most guitarists for playing solos.
If you want to play rhythm most of the time you get a more balanced sound from a PA speaker, it allows a better bass response and is "chunkier" overall.
If you are looking at using two speakers, I would choose a PA / monitor type for one of them, just to get the meat into the sound. But don't get fooled into thinking Alnico V is some kind of magic.
I use old speakers = mostly Goodmans Axiom, because that is what I have. But my dotfret semi sounds just as good through a 10" MacKenzie ceramic, if I mess around with the amp's tone controls.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
I agree that there's too much focus on magnet type, but I definitely disagree about the EQ frequencies. There's a HUGE range of EQ shapes available for guitar speakers. Smooth mids, accentuated, bright highs, boomier bass, whatever is appropriate, it's out there.dotfret wrote:There is too much attention attached to the nature of the magnet when speakers are mentioned. Don't think too much about that, it is how people make money from you.
Guitar speakers have a frequency prominence, they boost the region of frequencies in which guitars make sounds, and that suits most guitarists for playing solos.
If you want to play rhythm most of the time you get a more balanced sound from a PA speaker, it allows a better bass response and is "chunkier" overall.
If you are looking at using two speakers, I would choose a PA / monitor type for one of them, just to get the meat into the sound. But don't get fooled into thinking Alnico V is some kind of magic.
I use old speakers = mostly Goodmans Axiom, because that is what I have. But my dotfret semi sounds just as good through a 10" MacKenzie ceramic, if I mess around with the amp's tone controls.
A lot of guitar speakers go for punched high mids, with a high boost, which is like what you're talking about- like the Vintage 30. But that would be a bad match with an EL84 based 18 watter anyway.
The biggest reason I would avoid a PA or monitor type speaker, is that the efficiency and wattage handling will in no way compliment the amp's tone. It can sound good, sure, but it would be sterile in regards to guitar tone, and overdrive tone. A quality guitar speaker, close in wattage to the range of the amplifier, will be much more responsive to the amplifier, and contribute to the distortion tone.
A guitarist's tone has three primary parts (outside of skill and modifiers): guitar, amp circuit, speaker. By using a PA speaker, you neutralize 1/3 of the tone factor.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
Bump! Need speaker recommendation.
I'm looking at my first 18W build (probably the standard GDS kit). Not sure about head or combo yet, but will be 1x12 either way.
I'm a purely bedroom player, as it's been over a year since my last gig. So something low-efficiency is preferable, to get me a little closer to overdrive without pissing off my neighbours. I play clean to very slight crunch (think Brothers In Arms sort of levels). The 1974x is my second favourite sounding amp, so maybe a G12-M? Or something less efficient? Or cheaper? I'm in New Zealand, so local availablity might be limited and shipping costs are horrific.
Cheers all!
I'm looking at my first 18W build (probably the standard GDS kit). Not sure about head or combo yet, but will be 1x12 either way.
I'm a purely bedroom player, as it's been over a year since my last gig. So something low-efficiency is preferable, to get me a little closer to overdrive without pissing off my neighbours. I play clean to very slight crunch (think Brothers In Arms sort of levels). The 1974x is my second favourite sounding amp, so maybe a G12-M? Or something less efficient? Or cheaper? I'm in New Zealand, so local availablity might be limited and shipping costs are horrific.
Cheers all!
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
Decent-sounding guitar amp speakers are all pretty loud, to put it mildly! So I recommend using an attenuator or a VVR to tame the sound level.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
Now that you mention good speakers.. while buying 2nd hand weber 10" alnico and ceramic speakers, the seller told me he was cleaning out his garage. I got a quad of 70's eminence alnico 10" horse shoe speakers, which I paid 100€ for the 4 of'em.zaphod_phil wrote: ↑Mon 01/17/22 12:19 pmDecent-sounding guitar amp speakers are all pretty loud, to put it mildly! So I recommend using an attenuator or a VVR to tame the sound level.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
I know, it's a sad state of affairs. I have a 2W build coming for the super low-volume stuff. And an attenuator which can take 18W a little.zaphod_phil wrote: ↑Mon 01/17/22 12:19 pmDecent-sounding guitar amp speakers are all pretty loud, to put it mildly! So I recommend using an attenuator or a VVR to tame the sound level.
But my experience has been that low efficiency speakers make a small but noticeable difference.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
"low efficiency speakers make a small but noticeable difference."
Yes they can be an effective method of managing the output. My Watkins Scout which is one of the 18 watt's ancestors, has a single 10" Elac Alnico speaker. It works very well as a smaller space amplifier. That is at the low efficiency end of the spectrum.
As a solution it is not very flexible compared with VVR which is what I use on my 18 watt.
Dd
Yes they can be an effective method of managing the output. My Watkins Scout which is one of the 18 watt's ancestors, has a single 10" Elac Alnico speaker. It works very well as a smaller space amplifier. That is at the low efficiency end of the spectrum.
As a solution it is not very flexible compared with VVR which is what I use on my 18 watt.
Dd
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
That's very true! However, the background story is that Celestion designed the Vintage 30 to have the same frequency/ dynamic response as their famous Alnico Blue, but using a lower-cost ceramic magnet . The result was somewhat hard on the ears!JMPGuitars wrote: ↑Sun 03/01/15 10:07 amOne thing I can tell you is that most people find Vintage 30s to be way too bright with this circuit, and those are ceramic.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
How hard is VVR to incorporate into a standard 18W circuit?Daviedawg wrote: ↑Tue 01/18/22 4:39 am"low efficiency speakers make a small but noticeable difference."
Yes they can be an effective method of managing the output. My Watkins Scout which is one of the 18 watt's ancestors, has a single 10" Elac Alnico speaker. It works very well as a smaller space amplifier. That is at the low efficiency end of the spectrum.
As a solution it is not very flexible compared with VVR which is what I use on my 18 watt.
Dd
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
An early-80's G12-65 has appeared near me, which might be an option. They have a rep for being quite aggressive, but it's somewhere to start.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
That’s interesting! I always imagine VOX when I see those Alnico blues not a Marshall.
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
Vox players tend to like a lot of top end sizzle. I think I would like those blues in an 18W, but that's not for everybody . IMHO an old G12h30 from the 70's is THE speaker for an 18W. The G12 65 is more likely a mid scooped high gain type of thing. It will rob your 18W of its sweetness. get yourself an old G12h30 and you won't look back. Stay away from the recent 70th anniversary series... those stink! Heck, I even really like V30's in my 18 watts
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
"How hard is VVR to incorporate into a standard 18W circuit?"
If you look in the Downloads in the mods and circuit ideas section there is a circuit for TMB Siii with VVR for PA and PI. I used that power supply design as the method for incorporating VVR into my original trem circuit. Not too hard to do if you redraw that part of the circuit first. It calls for some extra parts which I incorporated on a tag strip alongside a pre-made small circuit board bought online. The control is on the back of the chassis to maintain the original look.
It is worth the effort to make it apply only to PA and PI. You can drop the voltage a long way and maintain the 18 watt tone.
If you apply to the whole you can only drop it 50% or so before you get degraded lower tones as it affects the preamp valves. Also if you have a trem it stops working at some point as you lower the voltage.
Dd
If you look in the Downloads in the mods and circuit ideas section there is a circuit for TMB Siii with VVR for PA and PI. I used that power supply design as the method for incorporating VVR into my original trem circuit. Not too hard to do if you redraw that part of the circuit first. It calls for some extra parts which I incorporated on a tag strip alongside a pre-made small circuit board bought online. The control is on the back of the chassis to maintain the original look.
It is worth the effort to make it apply only to PA and PI. You can drop the voltage a long way and maintain the 18 watt tone.
If you apply to the whole you can only drop it 50% or so before you get degraded lower tones as it affects the preamp valves. Also if you have a trem it stops working at some point as you lower the voltage.
Dd
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Re: speaker selection for first 18 watt build
G12M 20W is a great match with an 18W in my opinion/experience. They are very warm, rich, and detailed in a small space, and slightly less efficient too.
I do not care for the more recent G12H30 55Hz speakers. Way too boomy with a brittle top end for my taste. YMMV.
I do not care for the more recent G12H30 55Hz speakers. Way too boomy with a brittle top end for my taste. YMMV.
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