rwillett Posted Wednesday at 21:39 Posted Wednesday at 21:39 The cabs are stackable so relieving the stress on my two slipped discs 😁 1 Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted yesterday at 11:37 Posted yesterday at 11:37 15 hours ago, rwillett said: Finally got the top coat on and the other bits attached to the speaker. It's basically finished. As it's basically black, there's not a lot of detail that can be seen on camera. The Gnome goes on the top or at the back You can see the rails here for front and back with the grab handles Here's the grill attached It definitely has a chunky Lego or kids toy vibe to it That's one down, I need to mull on the lessons learnt and then do Cabinet #2. Rob Congratulations! Looks good. How does it sound? 1 Quote
rwillett Posted yesterday at 12:16 Posted yesterday at 12:16 It sounds very good. Lots of midrange tone and very loud. I suspect I need to spend some time with it to work out the sound I like the best. Rob 2 Quote
rwillett Posted yesterday at 12:39 Posted yesterday at 12:39 16 hours ago, Richard R said: Why do you need a second cab? Or is that the sort of question one shouldn't ask...? In a more serious vein, a second cab allows me to keep one connected in my "office" and one I can take out easily to jam with. I hate undoing all the connections and redoing them each time. Quote
rwillett Posted yesterday at 15:21 Posted yesterday at 15:21 Not sure if I should even post this here... It might offend some people so I've hidden this below. If you are easily offended, then don't look. You can't say you haven't been warned Spoiler Just plugged a Telecaster into the 8" cab and had 15 minutes of playing with that. The neck pickup is a bit muddy, but I can fix that. I turned the bass down a little, perhaps 10 o clock but the mid and treble EQ were left at 12:00, gain was at 09:00 and it was great. I'd have zero issues playing a guitar with this in place. I've got a Laney LC15R as well downstairs and if the jam session goes ahead tonight, I'll take both and see how it all sounds. I am seriously tempted to get a small valve head for this amp as well as the Gnome just to see how it all sounds. Caution: I have no idea what I'm talking about and other people may disagree. 2 3 Quote
Chienmortbb Posted yesterday at 15:52 Posted yesterday at 15:52 26 minutes ago, rwillett said: Not sure if I should even post this here... It might offend some people so I've hidden this below. If you are easily offended, then don't look. You can't say you haven't been warned Hide contents Just plugged a Telecaster into the 8" cab and had 15 minutes of playing with that. The neck pickup is a bit muddy, but I can fix that. I turned the bass down a little, perhaps 10 o clock but the mid and treble EQ were left at 12:00, gain was at 09:00 and it was great. I'd have zero issues playing a guitar with this in place. I've got a Laney LC15R as well downstairs and if the jam session goes ahead tonight, I'll take both and see how it all sounds. I am seriously tempted to get a small valve head for this amp as well as the Gnome just to see how it all sounds. Caution: I have no idea what I'm talking about and other people may disagree. Spoiler As T*l*s go, I like it, providing no one puts the bridge pickup through a Fender twin. Quote
Richard R Posted yesterday at 16:15 Posted yesterday at 16:15 @rwillettHere be dragons, and worse: https://www.basschat.co.uk/forum/99-guitar-amplifiers/ Quote
rwillett Posted yesterday at 16:28 Posted yesterday at 16:28 11 minutes ago, Richard R said: @rwillettHere be dragons, and worse: https://www.basschat.co.uk/forum/99-guitar-amplifiers/ Thanks for that. I had forgotten about that section, looks like the last time it was touched was nearly ten years ago I've plugged the Tele in, will plug the active Strat (heresy on heresy) in later and just have a play. The 8" cab is (to my ears) a very good cab for both guitars and basses. I would like to say it's my playing but I'm not that stupid (or egoistical). Rob Quote
Richard R Posted yesterday at 16:41 Posted yesterday at 16:41 (edited) https://www.guitarchat.co.uk/forum/15-amps-and-cabs/ GuitarChat is more current, but I just searched this site first, I didn't check how old the posts were. Edited yesterday at 16:41 by Richard R Quote
rwillett Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago The more I played, the more i liked the cab. The Gnome (which is technically a bass amp) suits it very well for both bass and guitar. I don't have any experience with other small amps so can't comment on the Elf but suspect it would be equally nice. Putting a bass through it, no compression or any pedals sounded great. The gain on the Gnome does make a big difference. It's far better than my Ampeg practise amp RB-108 but it's about twice the price in parts alone with the Gnome. I'll put some pedals on it as well as try it with some modellers, a Tonex and a Mod Dwarf. I'd like to get the Gnome set up with as flat a respective as I can. If I put a microphone into a Mac and ran Audacity would that be a good way to check the frequency response or would there be other recommended ways. It's great to have the Gnome attached on the top or the back as it's basically a small but loud combo. Hopefully a small and decent quality speakon cable will be coming soon. I showed it to the other half and she said how small but perfectly formed it was. The children (19 and 16 so not really children) thought it looked like Lego as well. Definitely a plus. Rob 5 Quote
Phil Starr Posted 10 hours ago Author Posted 10 hours ago I'm so pleased that you like it. I've used mine at rehearsals with a moderate drummer and a Gnome sitting on top. With a second cab you should be able to gig with most bands. I hope other people are inspired by you to give it a go. Well done Rob 6 Quote
rwillett Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago All the credit should go to all the people who did this before me. I didn't do anything clever but just followed other people and make my own mistakes. There's an awful lot of help here, freely given, for how to make it and make it work well. You don't need lots and lots of specialist tools, it can help, but a lot of people have found cheap and easy ways to do it. (That's a compliment BTW). I will be doing a second cab, and it will be made slightly differently as I have learnt what works and what doesn't. I may list all my mistakes so you can learn from them, but that might require a lot longer thread. For anybody who is thinking of building one, do it. Enormous satisfaction at the end which is nice, but you also get a good insight into what's needed. If I can do it anybody can. Rob 7 Quote
Obrienp Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago (edited) I have all the bits, except the plywood ready to go for a 12" cab. Unfortunately, illness over the last few months has prevented me from doing anything. I don't have the wherewithal to accurately cut the ply, so I am looking for a local supplier that can do it. My local B&Q doesn't but having seen the quality of the ply they sell, I wouldn't want to use them anyway. Congratulations @rwillett. I found your journey very inspiring. I might eventually get round to building the cab after all! Edited 5 hours ago by Obrienp 1 Quote
rwillett Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 2 minutes ago, Obrienp said: I have all the bits, except the plywood ready to go for a 12" cab. Unfortunately, illness over the last few months has prevented me from doing anything. I don't have the wherewithal to accurately cut the ply, so I am looking for a local supplier that can do it. My local B&Q doesn't but having seen the quality of the ply they sell, I wouldn't want to use them anyway. Congratulations @rwillett. I found your journey very inspiring. I might eventually get round to building the cab after all! Perhaps somebody on Basschat is local to you who can help with the cutting? My knowledge of the East Anglia area is zilch so can't comment. One option might be to clamp or screw down a length of straight wood on the inside of where the cut should be and to slowly cut through with a hand saw. That's how it used to be done anyway. If you go off the edge, at least it's on the waste side of the wood. That's one of the most difficult bits, the others (to me anyway) are cutting the large hole for the speaker and the port hole. I used a cheap trim router, but it could be done using a small hand saw. I am very happy to print you off the port pipe for nothing and post it down. If you are concerned about making a mess the speaker hole, I can also print you a little cover for the edges to hide any mistakes, that's the thing below. Its amazing what you can hide if you try hard enough There may be other options that people can suggest. If you were closer, you;d be welcome to come round and do it here or take some tools off to try. Rob 2 Quote
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