bradovka dropped over yesterday to pick-up parts to upgrade his TMB to a v6. It will be the first such conversion as far as I know since the kits are sIII /v6. This will be interesting to hear and I look forward to hearing his results.
But he brought over his home made attenuator and it was pretty impressive. So much so, I'm going to get one and do some tests on it.
It was a substantial and good looking beast he built, enclosed in a cast aluminum Hammond Box measuring 3.5" x 4.5" x 2.25" . It had some interesting graphics on it too!
He used the venereable Radio Shack
http://www.thesourcecc.com/estore/Produ ... ct=4008983The attenuator is meant as a wall mounted stereo volume control with 45 watts RMS / 90 watts max capacity. It had two transformers on a circuit board, one for each channel (L & R) and a step switch with many decks on it. It only works with 8 ohm speaker loads.
I'm always skeptical until I hear/see/try things for myself but I have to say, I was impressed because it worked very well.
I did notice a change in high end response on extreme attenuation
levels. bradovka agreed and suggested it was probably a combination of factors:
1) Our ears efficiency at low volumes
2) Speaker efficiency at low volumes,
3) Attenuators ability to evenly reduce volume across the spectrum.
bradovka said it sounds best when you set it at mid-range attenuation (-9 to -18db) and whatever 'loss' in high frequency can usually be dialed back in using the tone controls. You could switch it/out a 5/10uF cap to compensate for the loss in high end at low volumes.
So, if anyone else has used this, your input would be helpful. I was going to try power scaling but might now put that on the back burner [again]. Maybe bradovka can post some pictures and comment a bit more.
I plan to test this out & see what the frequency response is like and if it can be used safely without damaging an amp but so far, it looks pretty good and cost effective as an outboard attenuator!