• Ernie Ball
  • MusicMan
  • Sterling by MusicMan

shakinbacon

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 5, 2008
Messages
791
Fresh bongoloid here with another question for the experts

Was the Bongo preamp made 18V because the signal is much hotter with the eq flat than other basses in the lineup? Or was it because the EQ is that much more powerful and the headroom was required.

I'm not complaining, just curious

P.S. The tonal options are very, very impressive
 

Busterkilrain

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 7, 2004
Messages
219
Location
Vergennes,VT
I'm kinda a new Bongoloid to and I'm pretty sure Big Poppa said they just couldn't believe how great the preamp sounded when hooked up to 18v.
Brent
 

SharonG

Well-known member
Joined
May 14, 2006
Messages
607
Location
PA
Because why use a ball-peen when you can do it with a sledgehammer?!:D:D
 

scottbass71

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 7, 2003
Messages
850
Location
Melbourne, Australia
From my nerdy electronics back ground you can get more output swing from using 2 supplies (9V x 2) than 9v, also I think it increases the bandwidth of the op amp that is used in the circuit ( but I could be wrong I need to brush up on my op amp theory)
 
Last edited:

Basscake

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 23, 2008
Messages
149
Location
@ home
"These go to eleven!" :D:D:D


18V gives you heaps more headroom.

There are some mediocre preamps on the market that will produce a distorted Sound when you dail in an ample boost and dig in a bit harder.
-->Not desireable.

Very unlikely to happen on a 18V (or a decent 9V preamp, for that matter)
 
Last edited:
Top Bottom