ibodog wrote:BJF wrote:I found this in my drafts folder and something I posted in a technical section somewhere
Perhaps you can look at the tonestack you are refering to as a modified T-filter.
What was the "tonestack you are refering"?
The Duncan tone stack software has something similar to the Baxandal but slightly different. Functional equivalent? I think it's called the "Dave".
Hi,
Oh, I believe it was a schematic of a Fender amp AB something and the tonestack in that. When looking at that it can be clearly seen how it was derived from a Baxandall but it can also be viewed as a T-filter and compute as one but that's an other story. However in that thread someone also posted a link to the Duncan site- I know what kind of computations it takes to draw these curves and it is of course something suitable for a computor.
Some 30 years ago I asked an engineer to compute a filter similar to this but one I had tuned to what I liked to hear and I wanted to know what it did so I could make a connection between what I could hear with numbers- something that later became more important to me.
You know like when you record a guitar track and you need to tell the technician what frequencies you want attenuated when setting a sound.Such things saves time and creates a language and builds a bridge of words.
Of course later with more experience, if you can relate a feedbacking note to a frequency you can also remove that with a graphic eq that has sufficient numbers of bands such as maybe 32....
One can wonder a bit why graphic eq's for guitar are tuned the way they are?
Personally I liked mostly the MXR 6-band allthough that had a waterfall of noise so I had to rebuild that with lownoise transistors for all gyrators and an NE5532 for the EQ amplifier and thus reduced the noise by 40 dB!
However the tuning of the bands......!.1,6KHz though I hardly ever touched as then that would move the whole balance but I retuned that band for sharper Q and could then use it......
Parametric EQ's I do like especially since they can be most competent in finding just the right spot and you'd need many bands on a graphic eq to equal that....
However I have seen that many musicians have easier understanding of graphic EQ's since also those are supposed to show eq curve graphically while with a parametric eq you really are supposed to know what you are up to;)
Ah there's much more to say about this but it's a start and perhaps this can be a fun thread with many fun posts
Have fun
BJ