fivebass52 wrote:
Asking for a friend... no, seriously!
... Fellow bassist here in Hawaii, plays in a Roots/Reggae band, just bought a new TC Electronics head, wants to buy a GK-15, and a GK 4x10. He wants to know;
1. if one cabinet has a higher wattage than the other, which cabinet should the lead to go into first....
2. If he wants to run a crossover, is that a) feasible in this scenario, and b), if so, how would you set it up in the chain?
NO experience with any of this... and I'm wondering, considering the amp has a single out, would it be better to just have a compressor pedal instead, to tighten up the low-end, but allow all the wattage to pump the 15... thoughts?
Just a couple of thoughts on this:
1. The cabs will all be in parallel, so the order of the chain makes zero difference to where the power goes. The power will divide according to the relative impedance of the cabs: if impedance is the same, power will divide close to 50:50; if one impedance is lower, the cab with the lower impedance will get a larger proportion of the power.
2. A crossover is feasible, but would have to be designed from scratch based on the impedance characteristics of the cabs. But really, it doesn't make sense to use a crossover for two full-range cabs.
If "tightening up" the low end is the goal, I would try an HPF first. That would cut some of the amorphous extreme low end, and conserve amp power for the frequencies he does want to produce.
If he is looking to buy cabs specifically for dub, he should just double up on whichever cab handles the low end better (driver size isn't the deciding factor here--too many other factors at play).
I don't have any experience with compressors.
I'm sure there's a lot out there written for assembling a rig for this type of music. Sounds like a fun project