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I just picked up a Quilter Superblock US from another forum member. I have it paired with a Raezer's Edge 6" mini cab.
This minimalist setup has been along time coming. Many tube amps including Fender Twin and JC 120 in my past. Now this.
Read a little about the various setting on both the cab simulations and classic Fender Amplifiers, Blonde, Tweed and Blackface.
I have had it several weeks now it's early days. However, intitally the differences in the various settings for both mini toggle switches are difficult for me to decern. BTW I no longer hear certain frequencies and have a whooshing noise in both ears.
I am just curious what others have experienced with this device. Or is it the equivalent of a dog whistle such that only certain guitarists can hear it?
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01-29-2023 02:56 PM
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Great rig!
The middle setting ('57) sounded the best with my guitars; I heard differences between the settings, although not "huge" diffs.
Enjoy!
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I agree with Marcwhy. The differences between voicings are narrow. My go-to voicing is the 57 Tweed, simply because the pronounced midrange makes it the loudest. I'm freshly back from a jazz camp where the Saturday night jam session relied on a SuperBlock US paired with a TOOB 10S for guitar. In the cavernous club setting, this rig was more than enough and really shone.
The cab sims don't apply to speakers directly hooked up to the amp.
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As it just so happens I did my first amp-less recording session with it this weekend (thru the XLR- line out) and I was very happy with the result. I used the 57 amp setting and the NORMAL cab sim. With my pedal board in front of it and with my Gibson ES-333 it sounded very natural thru my Shure inears.
the resulst were better and more natural sounding than with my Joyo American Sound I used before.
I have also played it thru several of my amp’s speakers and I like it as a 25 watt amp as well: sounds and responds great, very tube-amp like (played clean at least).
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I am hearing something. But the changes seems very slight. I will have to listen more carefully. My preference is the Blaclkface 65 and the normal.
Originally Posted by marcwhy
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Interesting. I didn't realize this or expect this to be the case. So essentially your cab speaker directly to the amp and it's "natural" sound is what is heard regardless of the cab sim selection.
As per Quilter's user manual.
"Cab Sim: Operates on the signal going to the H-phones and Line-out jack."
Originally Posted by Gitterbug
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Think of cabinet simulation like this: the output going to the speaker doesn't need it since going to a speaker in a cab. Quilter uses some sort of magic sauce between speaker and power amp that mimics how it works in a tube amp.
The signal from XLR or phones doesn't have it since there isn't a speaker cabinet. Quilter uses cab sim to, well, simulate it. Mesa Boogie does the same for their direct outs.
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After playing around with the 3 amps, much as with others, the 57' sound the best to my ears.
Gitterbug: Spot on and well said about the pronounced mids making it sound louder.
My current setup. Mechanical pencils and ink pen for scale. They are approximately 5-5.5" in length.Last edited by Fear the Reaper; 01-30-2023 at 07:01 PM.
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Just turned 65 years old. Never thought the day would come when I would embrace or have lived long enough that this type of technology was available. So cool!!
Originally Posted by Fear the Reaper
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Originally Posted by Fear the Reaper
Last edited by Gitterbug; 01-31-2023 at 02:02 AM.
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Originally Posted by Fear the Reaper
use the same '57 on mine, to my ears it's what I prefer with the archtop.
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I find myself coming back to the 57 setting, too. However, differences are small indeed - to my ears, the 61 is the most linear, the 57 has a mid hump and the 65 a mid scoop. Nothing that a good eq can’t cure.
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Total agreement with your ears!
Originally Posted by docsteve
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Originally Posted by Little Jay
Thanks!
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That should be safe, as long as you don't crank the SBUS to full volume, full gain, with a boost pedal in front of it and all the EQ knobs maxed. That's the only way you'll get 25 watts out. At reasonable volumes, nothing bad should happen. Plus, the speaker power rating should be more than that of the amp.
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Originally Posted by izepeze
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Btw, I soldered several cables with different connections for my Superblock US to hook it up to the speakers of all my amps and I take it as a backup for if those amps fail on a gig. It actually sounds great through all of them, but especially through the Jensen P10R of my DIY Champ it sounds great!!
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Originally Posted by docsteve
Source: https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/07...f?v=1675796115
This is from the aviator combo, which has the same tone stack as the SBUS.
For more info on the tone stack, this video is very interesting.
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Originally Posted by omphalopsychos
There's very little info available on the maximum SPL available from common amps. The best I know of is this guy's work with a Super Reverb. Cranked to the max, he got it up to 122.9 dB driven by very hard hitting on a Les Paul. If an Aviator Cub will do that, I'm on my way to pick one up.
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Originally Posted by nevershouldhavesoldit
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I think you're right that the DB values are suspect. Even though the scale is a little bizarre, I imagine that the freq responses are proportionally accurate.
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I hear and feel distinct differences between the three voices. I like the 57 best and the 61 least. The 61 just seems too bright and thin to me. I really like brownface amps so I thought I was going to like this blonde voicing too but really do not. I also find I like to get the gain knob up a bit on all 3 voices to get a fuller tone. Basically I need to up the limiter and the gain to get a tube-like feel myself.
When it comes to going direct, I've been very happy with it. You can use it in the 65 voice for a clean base
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Originally Posted by John A.
Most people don't realize how loud 100 dB is. Most typical consumer audio systems can't reach an average of 95 dB. Jet planes generate about 120 dB on takeoff. Snowmobiles hit about 110 dB and the loudest emergency vehicle sirens may hit 130 dB. It's hard to imagine that a 50 Watt Aviator Cub could possibly top 120 dB at any frequency let alone hit 132.
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Originally Posted by nevershouldhavesoldit
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
Mr Magic guitar solo
Today, 05:45 AM in From The Bandstand