
cabbinet adding an extension to a guitar amp combo?
Hey, I have a Line 6 Spider III 150 watt combo, and im thinking of buying cabinet expansion for it. But Im not sure if it will be any use .. Does it make than usual, or will it simply divide among pregnant Amplifiers in the cabinet and the President of the amp?
It splits the amplifiers between them. Expansion cabinets are not an amp "stronger", but they not push more air (ie takes longer to probe there), so you'll actually be better understood if you're in a band, etc.. Cabin Extension can also give your amp a little subtle flavor … For example, put a Celestion Lead 80 2×12 combo cab below your tone that would not be the color your sound too, will not overdrive, but will always have Nice tight low and drive well. Put a car loaded with vintage 30's or something something like this will give you a sound that * is * very colorful, you get a very "bent" sound of them, but you'll also have less bass response and lower overall volume. I took for relatively speakers high power, especially if she is modeling amp 150 watts … you do not want your speakers to break too, because it cut a part of your bottom line. I love the Celestion GT75's, they are a little more colorful that the lead 80, ie lower levels, more contoured mids and lows so low, but the overall effect is very "rock" … agreements Power is fragmented and tight, and treble cut through the mix but are not there or icepick-Hissy / shrieky. EDIT: Let me clarify that the last answer. If your amp has a jack for 8 ohm output impedance, then you want the game to an 8 ohm cab. That's all you to remember … impedance will be at the rear of the speaker right next to the jack itself … you not need to know something about VS series parallel wiring, just read the manual and pay attention to the output impedance of the amplifier and make sure it is equal to the speaker impedance on the cab extension. Saul
Orange Crush 30R Combo Amp

