If you have one, yes. Alone at home is generally a different game.Isn't that what bass players are for...
You probably structurally damaged your house as well!I tried that once with my Mark V (90W). I never hit the clipping point, but I think I sterilized myself.
Definitely don’t turn up the master, for starters. That is the absolute last thing you wanna do when trying to get more low end out of an amp. Seriously, the absolute last thing. Keep the master no higher than 9 o’clock or so. I don’t care if it’s the JVM models, 800, whatever,‘doesn’t matter. The more you turn up the master, the more you clip the power section which cuts low end and high end. That’s why they sound super midrangey when the volume gets high. This applies to all high gain amps by the way. In fact I bias my real diezel Herbert alittle colder than stock for just this reason. Tighter and more lows and highs.
Im well aware of what that thread says. Use your ears. There is not one high gain model that has a bigger, tighter low end with the master volume up above its clipping point. Not one. This is extremely accurate in the axe fx compared to the real amps counterpart. There’s a reason why tube amps like 5150s and Diezel Herbert’s have huge power sections and are biased on the cold side: it’s so the power section stays together, doesn’t get mushy, and keeps the low end BIG. Clipping a poweramp esssentially turns an amp into the equivalent of moving your high pass filter higher, and moving your low pass filter lower and lower….your narrowing the bandwidth of the frequencies, which is why they often get super midrangey and shitty. Again, we are talking about “modern” ( jcm800 and forward) high gain amps.
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This occurs because the virtual power amp is distorting, and quite heavily. Due to the impedance curve of the virtual speaker load this causes the bass and high treble frequencies to clip but not the midrange. The result is, naturally, compressed bass and high treble which can sound muddy and indistinct. Modern MV amps are not designed to overdrive the power amp considerably. They are designed to get most of their distortion from the preamp and then adjust the MV until the power amp just starts to clip which is the "sweet spot".
Some amps, like the Recto Modern, will distort the power amp at very low MV values, around 2.0. In real life these amps are painfully loud at these settings but in our virtual world we are unaware of this because the Level control allows us to adjust the volume to any arbitrary level.”
Cliff is literally saying exactly what I’m saying…you want more low end that’s tighter and bigger? Keep your master volume low on high gain amps, it’s really that simple. Again, I own or have owned just about every high gain amp on the planet and I monitor in a great room with a 12,000 dollar genelec system: you aren’t getting more and better low end by clipping that power section, you just aren’t. I’m not sure where that myth came from with high gain amps but it’s simply not true, in the least. I know MANY engineers and producers who, like me, bias their amps alittle on the colder side for this reason. I turn down the bias on a few of the amps in the axe fx as well, namely the 5150 because even Cliff said the one he modeled was biased hot I believe.
No one else told you, so, I will
1) Go to York Audio's website and get the Marshall 25 cab IR pack.
Load up the IR that is an MD421V-1.
2) Go to the power amp Tab on the Editor and set power tube bias to at least 70%.
This works on every Marshall amp except JMP-1 pre.....that one you do the same, but you have to dig a bit deeper. The stock power amp on that model is weak sounding, so you have to do more tweaking to get it close to the real deal, like they were intended to be used. When Cliff modeled the JMP-1 he should have tried a DSL as the power amp.
The myth turning everything to 10 is just that.....a myth and sounds horribly muddy. Set tonestack controls to around noon and adjust for taste. Gain on a plexi style....use Treble CH and put gain around 4-6 and hit the front with a drive pedal like 90% of every recording you heard. Drive pedal should be set more as a clean boost (low gain/High Level) than a distortion pedal. Many guys will choose different drive pedals. I like the Klon the best. It doesn't cut the low end as much.
3) come back here and thank me
Seriously, I am a Marshall guy and I think the Fractal does a fantastic job on most of those models and I do the above for pretty much each model. I hate to say it, but I have never found an included IR or a dynacab version that gets the job done like that York Audio IR. <<This will give you the beef you are seeking.
Edit: I forgot one....make sure the SIC is set to the appropriate one. With the York Audio IR I use the Friedman GB SIC.
One note, I turned down the Grid Bias from my typical ~80% down to 45% based on the above @VESmedic recommends, and it's VERY nice, still warm but cleaner. Unexpected goodness!

thisThe Marshall models are perhaps the most accurate models on this planet. Marshalls are very bright. Those classic, warm sounds are because those G12M speakers are warm. Use the 1960TV with the condenser or ribbon mic.

JCM's and Plexi's aren't high gain amps, and you can def turn their MV's tip higher than you would other amps. They almost always sound better if you do.Have you ever turned a high gain amps master volume up above it’s clipping point?
Those posts are pure gold, thanks. I thought for SURE the "MV no higher than 9 O'Clock" was a typo....so...set it to ~2 then? Really?! So I went to my go-to 2203 High, made the change (MV 6.5 to 2), adjusted the tonestack, turned off the bright switch, dropped the bias to 45% and I would have never believed the changes it made had I not gone ahead and just done it. It sounds absolutely glorious. I mean GLORIOUS. It cleaned up every damned thing I couldn't get done over months. Full. Beefy. Tight. Clear as a bell. Feel is amazing. Headroom?? That headroom level hasn't moved from "slammed" in a long time. It's bouncing around -7 dB. Brilliant, thanks again man!
Always open to new IRs, we are alike in that I've struggled to find the factory IR/DC that just makes my day, so I'm always seeking that perfection I gel with. So, I went ahead and grabbed the YA Marshall 25 pack, and you are absolutely right, that IR is fantastic!! So, same setup as my post above, after the changes I swapped in a pair of those MD421V-1s panned -45/45 and holy shit brother it's like a battalion of Sherman tanks, sooooo beefy and ballsy and still crisp!! So, indeed, returning to say thanks!One note, I turned down the Grid Bias from my typical ~80% down to 45% based on the above @VESmedic recommends, and it's VERY nice, still warm but cleaner. Unexpected goodness!
I'm having to fucking rethink everything today, but it's all good! I really appreciate these discussions, and those who participate and share their knowledge with all. The value of the Fractal forums really is the sort of unspoken benefits to owning a Fractal device that often gets overlooked. We have the greatest most accurate modeller on the planet, AND we have a LOT of great knowledge shared on how to get the most out of it. Win Win!
Happy Thanksgiving to all!![]()
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I've never had lack of bass using my favorite Marshall: the JS410.
Could the problem be your IR choice? Monitors? Room acoustics?
An 800 is fine to turn up the master IMO , generally anything w 3 gain stages or less and EL34 British power section you can crank it a bitMy point has been that mv at 5 on a jcm800 wont sound thin. Im confident my not perfect comparison clip conveyed it
Will try the grid bias thing tomorrow!
Philosophical question: Blackmore not only used single-coils, but also a Treble Booster with his Marshall Major. How did he achieve that thick tone?
TBH, I really don't know if he does or not but a wild guess, he probably does the same thing I do when playing my strat through a Marshall......turn down that tone knob.Philosophical question: Blackmore not only used single-coils, but also a Treble Booster with his Marshall Major. How did he achieve that thick tone?
As other have stated, this thread is gold. I’m looking soon to try out some of these adjustments.
@VESmedic you mentioned Budda needing to volume match his clips. Are you saying with the changes that you’ve described that one would need to increase the level output on the amp block to compensate? I haven’t before adjusted really any parameters outside of the basic tab. When I’ve had a lower master volume, its always felt like the meat was removed from the amp.
I’m just listening out of cheap studio monitors (Tannoy 501a) at a reasonable volume. Maybe that’s also why I don’t hear much difference between firmware releases.
They didn't because Tweed amps are very dark sounding beasts - there were NO pedals back in those halcyon days, so the idea was that bridge pickup was your "lead" pickup, so it had to cut through tonally rather by some kind of volume/gain boost. That Fender never bothered changing either that nor going to a five way switch despite gazillions of Strat players jamming the pickup selector in the in-between positions to get them there clucky sounds until the, what, late seventies, remains a mystery of universe bending proportions!TBH, I really don't know if he does or not but a wild guess, he probably does the same thing I do when playing my strat through a Marshall......turn down that tone knob.
I have never been a huge fan of Blackmore but after I discovered the tone knob on the bridge pup, I totally get why he only uses the bridge and neck pup. I live on the bridge pup on my strat and I bury the middle pup down into the pickguard and never use those 2 and 4 positions.
Why Fender originally didn't have a tone knob on the bridge pup is bewildering.