BoogieMKIIA Posted Sunday at 03:44 AM Posted Sunday at 03:44 AM It’s like a step backwards in regular speaker design, reducing efficiency, but makes a lot of sense nowadays. No IR required. 2 Quote
Disturber Posted Sunday at 10:10 AM Posted Sunday at 10:10 AM I don't think that youtube clip sounds that good though. Kinda thin sounding. I know it's just a sound clip, but still. It does not give me GAS. (Okay, the guy plays a Strat. Soundclips with Strats are always the worst. Why do they do this? Still, the Cremeback sounds better here). I am so in love with the 1986 pair of 8ohm Celestion G12M-75's with the vented magnets that I bought two months ago. They sound extremely similar to the 65's from around the same time period. Killer speakers. Never knew 75's could sound this good. I put them in a Marshall and a Fender combo. Love what they did to the amps. I rather go with speakers that I really like and use a attenuator than using a speaker that does not sound great. That would be a better compromise for me. 4 Quote
burningyen Posted Monday at 02:42 PM Posted Monday at 02:42 PM Hmm, from the title I was expecting variable attenuation, which would've been a neat trick. Still, I can see this being popular nowadays. 3 Quote
Kerry Marchman Posted Tuesday at 02:29 AM Posted Tuesday at 02:29 AM Maybe it's my headphones, but that thing sounds like a broken AM radio to me... Nope, it's not my headphones.. 3 1 Quote
Jakeboy Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago If Celestion could make 86db models of GBs, g12h, V30s, and the Blue, they’d sell silly amounts….but they’d have to sound like their full power counterparts….and I don’t know if that is physically possible. Quote
hamerhead Posted 46 minutes ago Posted 46 minutes ago Someone should invent low-watt amplifiers. Quote
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