I recently build a VOX AC15 as well as refurbished a Silvertone 1482. I'm happy with both amps but they are much louder than I require. At band practice I can barely get the volume above 1 and people are complaining that I am too loud. If I turn the volume down then the tone gets really thin and there is no overdrive harmonics just breaking up character (whatever you want to call it) that I like.
I have a cheap commercial attenuator (Jet City) that decreases the volume but it seems to impact the tone and feel of the amp. I believe it is resistive only. A friend suggested I needed a "reactive" attenuator. After reading about a number of commercial offerings I can across a DIY design found on
another forum with 80+ pages of information and positive responses. I build the "M2" design that does not have the bass resonance circuit.
If you buy parts off of that big auction site, then it can be built for around $50. Unfortunately, the shipping from China these days estimates delivery to be mid-August so I paid the extra money and bought the resistors from Mouser. I was able to get a US made enclosure and the jacks, switches and inductor from Parts Express. Total ended up being about $80 for everything.
While most of the builds in the thread have enclosures with lots of holes, etc. I just installed the resistors in the enclosure to see what would happen. Ends up that my lower power amps don't need the extra ventilation. I was able to use the attenuator at band practice for 3 hours without it getting warm at all. I was able to play along side the drummer, bass and guitar without any issues. I adjusted the amp's controls for the tone I wanted and then engaged the attenuator. All I needed was about 10dB reduction for people to stop complaining. :-D
I'm wondering if anyone else has built this attenuator or something similar (I think it was really just an evolution of the Aiken attenuator). What are your thoughts? I'm pretty happy for a simple cheap solution to my volume issues.