First post here, sorry if in wrong forum. This will make history 
It has come to my attention that many players are reluctant to clip/remove bright caps on deluxe reverbs due to safety matters, time constraints, keeping vintage amps original, afraid of either extremes etc.
I like messing around with the tone caps on my guitar yet seldom find the right value to cut bright frequencies whilst keeping and "open" sound.
What if we calculated the value of a GUITAR tone cap to directly compensate for the bright cap frequencies in the AMPLIFIER? This way we could leave the bright cap in (maybe even out
) and use guitar tone pot to work around it.
Or if you had no reason not to remove the bright cap from your amp, you could remove it, and roll up the tone on your guitar to achieve the original sound; all it takes is the roll of a knob to take you between "clipped" and original "unclipped" sound, but better because you have a whole range of in-between sounds.
Or you could leave the bright cap in and roll down your town knob, where at 0 the amp sounds like the bright cap is clipped. (useful because the effect of the bright cap varies at different amp volumes, you could use the guitar tone knob to compensate)
I know a little about tone caps and eq filter types, and that the ohm value and the capacitor value together equate to certain frequencies. But I'm not sure how this match of frequency could be achieved. Could it be as simple as swapping the bright cap in the amp with the tone cap in your guitar kinda thing? Or would you need to use an equation to calculate the frequencies being boosted/attenuated by the bright cap at that value and ohm load, to figure out the tone cap value in the guitar needed to boost/attenuate the same frequencies?
If I am wrong and the effect of bright cap and tone cap are different eq effects, (say the bright cap is a filter at 4kHz, and one in the guitar is a parametric notch, for example), can we please add a resistor or something to the standard guitar tone system to work as a filter too, so that they are compatible?
Because its the 21st century and I hate my tone knob but love my deluxe reverb so damn much.
It has come to my attention that many players are reluctant to clip/remove bright caps on deluxe reverbs due to safety matters, time constraints, keeping vintage amps original, afraid of either extremes etc.
I like messing around with the tone caps on my guitar yet seldom find the right value to cut bright frequencies whilst keeping and "open" sound.
What if we calculated the value of a GUITAR tone cap to directly compensate for the bright cap frequencies in the AMPLIFIER? This way we could leave the bright cap in (maybe even out
Or if you had no reason not to remove the bright cap from your amp, you could remove it, and roll up the tone on your guitar to achieve the original sound; all it takes is the roll of a knob to take you between "clipped" and original "unclipped" sound, but better because you have a whole range of in-between sounds.
Or you could leave the bright cap in and roll down your town knob, where at 0 the amp sounds like the bright cap is clipped. (useful because the effect of the bright cap varies at different amp volumes, you could use the guitar tone knob to compensate)
I know a little about tone caps and eq filter types, and that the ohm value and the capacitor value together equate to certain frequencies. But I'm not sure how this match of frequency could be achieved. Could it be as simple as swapping the bright cap in the amp with the tone cap in your guitar kinda thing? Or would you need to use an equation to calculate the frequencies being boosted/attenuated by the bright cap at that value and ohm load, to figure out the tone cap value in the guitar needed to boost/attenuate the same frequencies?
If I am wrong and the effect of bright cap and tone cap are different eq effects, (say the bright cap is a filter at 4kHz, and one in the guitar is a parametric notch, for example), can we please add a resistor or something to the standard guitar tone system to work as a filter too, so that they are compatible?
Because its the 21st century and I hate my tone knob but love my deluxe reverb so damn much.