DAR Amplifiers...

Ola Englund

Only gay in the village
Dec 1, 2001
3,998
2
38
Stockholm, Sweden
www.olaenglund.com
Anyone tried them? Looks like they're taken from the latest Star Trek movie.

Why I ask is that I MIGHT be playing one of those live tonight.

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My friend Dallas Marlow (also a Stinnett customer!) is endorsed by them. He should be getting his amp in the next month or so. He doesn't play metal by a long shot, rock and blues, etc. but he's a great player and knows good tone when he hears it. The thread from a while back was by me :) regarding my friend's endorsement in fact.
 


[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TE0Ui3Ql_WI&feature=channel[/ame]

not a flattering sound from the room and the camera mic, but i think it shows great potential
 
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One of the coolest features, at least the one my friend Dallas is getting, is that it is constantly changing the voltage to the tubes to be optimum the entire time you play. When you chug, it reacts and adjusts the shit, trem pick, adjusts, dive bomb - ADJUSTS. These amps have way too many features :lol: I just wanna know how they SOUND though.
 
But doesnt the voltage actually swings depending on what you play on every amp ? It is never constant afaik
 
But doesnt the voltage actually swings depending on what you play on every amp ? It is never constant afaik

IIRC, different voltages. There's voltage that's contantly applied to the tubes and then voltage that is from your playing. I might be wrong though. I do know that i've never heard of an attempt to deliberately adjust voltages to playing on the fly
 
IIRC, different voltages. There's voltage that's contantly applied to the tubes and then voltage that is from your playing. I might be wrong though. I do know that i've never heard of an attempt to deliberately adjust voltages to playing on the fly

you have a consistent DC voltage (with a DC ripple) being supplied to each stage. However as the amp changes its state of conduction there is a small loading effect on the supplied voltage, causing it to oscillate with the input signal. If the change in current it not mitigated you will have tube sag. While even amps with diode rectifier and even a choke have tube sag, the more regulated the amp is, the severity of the sag is minimized.
 
not a flattering sound from the room and the camera mic, but i think it shows great potential

The first video showed promise... that guys a solid guitar player.

What the FUCK was going on in the 2nd? Couldn't think of anything more interesting to play? Looked like a total tard bopping his head about, too.

Sounds pretty shite tuned low, though :(.