Solid State vs Valve for Home Practice
Solid State vs Valve for Home Practice
I mainly play at home and occasionally record demos. I like the feel of valve amps but I can’t always turn them up enough to sound their best. Are modern solid state or modeling amps good enough these days for tone and feel?
- MetalPlayer
- Guitar hero
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Solid State vs Valve for Home Practice
It really depends on what inspires you to play.
If a modeling amp lets you plug in quickly, experiment with sounds, and practice more often, that’s a bigger benefit than chasing a subtle feel difference that only shows up at higher volumes.
If a modeling amp lets you plug in quickly, experiment with sounds, and practice more often, that’s a bigger benefit than chasing a subtle feel difference that only shows up at higher volumes.
Solid State vs Valve for Home Practice
I still prefer valves for recording, but I use an attenuator to keep the volume manageable.
Solid State vs Valve for Home Practice
Modeling amps have come a long way. For home use, the convenience of headphone outputs and built-in effects is hard to beat.
- Solarflares
- I'm rocking
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Re: Solid State vs Valve for Home Practice
We develop an affinity to working with the response of a valve amp at it’s limit. This is a hard-won exercise.
You owe it to yourself to buy a quality attenuator if you wish to approach practice at bedroom levels.
That’s not to say that you can’t learn a lot by playing unplugged with a metronome, but when you plug in - it’d better always be in anger.
You owe it to yourself to buy a quality attenuator if you wish to approach practice at bedroom levels.
That’s not to say that you can’t learn a lot by playing unplugged with a metronome, but when you plug in - it’d better always be in anger.