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I wonder, what is the Super lead sound? Does any OD/Dist stompbox have that sound? Were the heads tube or ss?


Originally Posted by ThurisarzI wonder, what is the Super lead sound?

A 100W non-master volume tube head (the mystical Plexi amps preferred) with EL34s cranked to its limits through a couple of 4-12 cabinets (real wood, not the new MDF) with 25W greenbacks.
Originally Posted by ThurisarzDoes any OD/Dist stompbox have that sound?

Many, actually most, have tried, none have totally succeeded. The closest are probably the Carl Martin pedals, Radial Engineering tube pedals, Marshall pedals, or some other boutique pedals designed around the sound, you won't find one in the Boss or Ibanez lineup. But, pedals can't totally create the physics of the interactions of the power tubes, trannies, and cabinet and speaker interactions. Originally Posted by ThurisarzWere the heads tube or ss?

Blasphemy See the first point above.

We'll forgive you because of your age When the Super Lead came out, there weren't many, if any, SS amps around. It was one of the first, if not the first, 100W head made.

Hope this helps,
Roger

Listen to the Van Halen albums from 1978 through 1984. There's a Super Lead. Granted, he ran is differently than conventional setups but it's a Super Lead nonetheless. The Who would be a good listen for what it sounds like and Hendrix stuff.

100 Watts of pure all tube power .... (in Tim Allen grunt) Ho Ho Ho !!!!

I'm gonna quot;Bi-ampquot; my Bass and guitar amp and i want OD only from the guitar amp. I have talked with my friend at the local store and i'm thinking of getting either a A B box and have a OD pedal in the guitar chain and have the bass amp clean for the lows or getting a BOSS LS-2 Line selector. The Boss way is the cheapest way but also the recommendation from my friend at the store. So i need something in the guitar amp line for OD.


Originally Posted by ThurisarzI'm gonna quot;Bi-ampquot; my Bass and guitar amp and i want OD only from the guitar amp. I have talked with my friend at the local store and i'm thinking of getting either a A B box and have a OD pedal in the guitar chain and have the bass amp clean for the lows or getting a BOSS LS-2 Line selector. The Boss way is the cheapest way but also the recommendation from my friend at the store. So i need something in the guitar amp line for OD.

A simple A/B box is all you need. Your guitar would go in to the A/B box, then split from there to each amp. OD on the guitar amp side would be between the A/B box and the amp.

If you want a cool Super Lead sounding pedal, not exact but in the ballpark, and can do your own electronics stuff, check out the Thunderchief at There's some clips too. It's incredible.

If you're actually quot;bi-ampingquot; what are you going to use for your crossover?


Originally Posted by The Golden BoyIf you're actually quot;bi-ampingquot; what are you going to use for your crossover?


What The Golden Boy is asking is what are you using to split the low frequencies to the bass amp and the highs and mids to the guitar amp. That is what a crossover does. It allows you to split your frequencies across two amps, or more depending on if it's a 2-way, 3-way or 4-way crossover, like in a sooped up car stereo. That is usually what bi-amping means.

I'm assuming you just want to split your signal as-is to two different amps and switch between the two, using the bass amp for clean work.

So i need a crossover device you say? For the moment i just need to get sound out of 2 amps with one instrument.


Originally Posted by ThurisarzSo i need a crossover device you say? For the moment i just need to get sound out of 2 amps with one instrument.

At the same time?
Do you want to split the frequencies?

Make sure you're using a bass cab with your guitar head. Even though it's a guitar head you're still going to be pushing out a lot of bottom end for 25w guitar speakers to handle.

Regarding bi-amping- amps like the GK800rb have that crossover built into the amp- 300w goes to the lows and 100w goes to the high end.

What are you using for your bass amp?


Originally Posted by ErikHAt the same time?
Do you want to split the frequencies?
Yes at the same time. This Boss line selector looks interesting because it let's me do both amps A B at the same time and then i just press the button and i only use one amp.


Originally Posted by ThurisarzYes at the same time. This Boss line selector looks interesting because it let's me do both amps A B at the same time and then i just press the button and i only use one amp.

Ok, good, that's out of the way. Now do you want to split the frequencies? I'm assuming not. If that is the case, then the line selector would do what you need.


Originally Posted by ErikHOk, good, that's out of the way. Now do you want to split the frequencies? I'm assuming not. If that is the case, then the line selector would do what you need.
It sounds interesting to split the freqs but i want to try before i buy.

The SLP in the name is for super lead plexi, i think.

My favorite Marshall tones come from a jumpered Super Lead. Fat city.

My guess is he doesn't want to bi-amp his setup. Does anybody actually do this? I've never heard about it regarding guitar amps, but the bi-amped P.A. setups I've used have always had the bi-amp installed into the bass bins. I would have thought that this translates to any bi-amped guitar signal as well. I've never even thought about doing this before, but it would be so cool!

I've seen bass rigs bi-amped like PA systems but never a guitar rig. I think he used bi-amp meaning using more that one amp at once.

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