- Why do amp speakers have a grittyness in it? Is it associated with low wattage rating? If your sound isn't very "brown" then how can one avoid this and create; a generally cleaner and simplified sound?
- Also, what's this buttery sound in it too? I had a theory that it was possibly using smaller capacitors to soften the signal, that can lead to a dullened/buttery like sound.
Buttery would, I suspect, be plenty of low order harmonic distortion.
Grittiness would, methinks, be the sound you get when there's a little bit too much of the top-end when using distortion.
Either that, or pour some sand into the voice coil gap during manufacture.
Grittiness would, methinks, be the sound you get when there's a little bit too much of the top-end when using distortion.
Either that, or pour some sand into the voice coil gap during manufacture.
It's pretty pointless using meaningless descrptions, it's the sort of crap you get in audio reviews 😛
Try to define better what you hear. If it seems a bit distorted, fuzzy, yes - that's what guitar speakers should sound like (taking for granted the "instrument speakers" you mention are guitar ones). You don't want a cleaner sound in guitar speakers. It's exactly their distortion and color that makes them suit the purpose. How dirty is what is known as "that" sound. Dirt is actually a design goal - coil placement and so are determined to create nonlinearities. Best regards, Emerson
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