I looked, in this forum, at the Topic about tremolo and Amp GA-1 RT-1.
We should look at the
Gibson GA-1 RT-1 schematic.
I looked, in this forum, at the Topic about tremolo and Amp GA-1 RT-1.
Looks like something I would like to test.
I understand the Tremolo, but the Reverb and to hook it up to another amps speaker.
So it will work like one amp, dry signal and this amp with the reverb signal.
Am I right about this ?
I think you might be talking about the topic,
On the Bench: Gibson GA-1RT-1 What the......? Is that correct?
This amp, its reverb, and everything
is all one self-contained unit. The Red & Black inputs shown leading into the reverb tank are the + and - outputs from the output transformer secondary.
That is, the amp takes its speaker output (which is probably ~8Ω), feeds that into a reverb tank, and applies the reverb output to the 1st preamp stage.
Pretend it's 1962, and you're Gibson. Fender just came out with their outboard reverb unit, which plugs in between the guitar and amplifier input. Fender's unit takes a guitar signal and uses it to drive a 6K6 output tube, whose output transformer drives an 8Ω reverb tank. The resulting signal is applied to an amp input (after Dwell, Tone & Mix controls).
You want to one-up Fender, and your budget student amp has an 8Ω speaker output. Why not use that speaker out to drive a reverb pan, and mix that pan with the same amp's input signal? Sure you don't have all the controls of the Fender unit, but you "cheap amp" already has reverb
Built- In!!But wouldn't feeding the amp's output back to its input make it feed back? At low levels, the reverb output is different-enough so that the answer is No, but as the linked thread says, it will feedback at higher volume with the reverb on.
Can you recommend a reverb tank that can work in this circuit ?
The same 8Ω tank used by all old Fender amps.
Now if you want, you
can build an amp that has no actual dry signal, but takes another amp's dry signal as input to the reverb, then amplifies that enough to drive a speaker. I suppose that's a way to add reverb to a distorted amp sound, where you
reverb the distortion, rather than getting
distorted reverb. It might be hard to match the Reverb Amp's power level to all desired dry amps...
Some old amps fed their dry output to one set of speakers (in the combo cabinet), and tapped that output to drive a reverb pan, then amplified through to a small single-ended output stage which drove other speakers (in the same combo cabinet). It was either THD or Budda that built a tweed Bassman copy that did exactly this, with 3 of the 4 speakers driven by the main amp, and 1 speaker driven by the reverb side-chain amp.
That it takes this much for me to explain the concept just goes to show the idea didn't really catch on, even the 2nd time around...