SPITFIRE II OWNER’S MANUAL PAGE 9 OF 17
What will we have learned? Most likely, this test will have resulted in few observations: (1)
the tone is brighter, tighter and punchier when the gain is down on the gain channel; (2) the
tone is cleaner and rounder when the gain is down on the clean channel; (3) the tone is mean
and nasty when the gain is up on the crunch channel; (4) the higher the volume, the fuller the
amp is and the more punch you’ll get from the channel; and (5) there is a lot you can do
tonally by simply varying these two controls.
NOTE: This amp is capable of producing extreme amounts of gain. IT IS NOT
ADVISED TO EVER TURN THE GAIN UP ALL THE WAY. In year’s past, our amps
sounded great, but just didn’t quite have enough gain. So we rolled them to 10 and
sometimes still added a pedal. Nowadays, the gain we wanted is built in and sometimes a lot
more than we may ever need. The high end of the gain structure on this amp is capable of
potentially surpassing the tube’s ability to keep up. This can result in feedback and squeals.
It will also push the tubes beyond where they optimally perform. On your crunch channel,
start with your gain at 5 and work from there. On your clean, start with your gain at around 2
and work up.
Bass. This is the most incorrectly used control on an amp. Do we all want fat low end? You
bet. Do we get that by diming the bass control? Not on this amp.
The simple truth of a good tube amp is that the amp will do its job and produce low end. The
higher the volume, the more low end the amp will produce. So when the amp is producing
your nice low tones, introducing extra low frequencies from the bass knob has a tendency to
“muddy” the tone or make the amp sound “looser.” Lesson here? Keep your bass knob
under control if you’re putting any real volume through the amp (at low volume, you may want
to add a little bass back in to try to mimic the tones you’ve dialed in on higher settings).
Middle. The mid-range of an amp is by far the most critical tone range. Remember, guitar is
a predominately mid-range instrument. Suck out the mids and try hearing yourself in the mix.
DA spent truckloads of time on the mid-range. As a result, one thing is for sure. It will take a
concerted effort on your part to dial yourself out of the mix. That being said, your mid-range
control will wildly change your tone. After you’ve set your other controls, work on this one.
Set your mids at 5 and see what you think. Then, to hear the variance, sweep the mid-range
from 3 or 4 on the low range to 9 or 10 on the high.
NOTE TO US METAL GUYS: Don’t be afraid of your mids. All the crunch in the world is fine,
so long as the audience can hear us. Take out too many mids and you’ll get lost in the mix.
Keep your mids lower for that great metal “edge”, but lower on this amp is still north of 3. Try
the settings between 3 and 5. Of course, if your metal sound of choice bears more
resemblance to the metal tones of the 80’s (yes, I grew up on these!), you’ll be happiest with
mid settings well north of 5 (say 6-8 or even higher in some cases).
Treble/Presence. The interplay between treble and presence is always unique. Depending
on how your old amp was designed, sometimes they work backwards, sometimes one
doesn’t work, sometimes they work like you’d expect. So, forget what amp(s) you’ve used
before. Here is how they work on this amp.