talbany wrote:but for me, it always thins and compresses the tone.
Tag
If you run the master on the amp up say around 7 this should drive the buffer/cathode follower into generating some nice fat 2nd order harmonics, thickening the tone along with the compression thang!!
This is how it should work..IMO The d-lator does change the phase with relation to the input maybe what you are hearing or there could be a phase issue with the effect..IIf it's phase of the dlator you could go with a reversed speaker cable..
Tony
I have tried all kinds of combinations and Dulators, including an actual Dumbleator into several different Dumbles at Ultrasound, Bludlators into Bludos, twoRocks version into TwoRocks, Quinns into Quinns, and many built in varietys. They all seem to do basically the same thing, and I guess i can see why some people would like that tone for some things, but for me, it takes away far more than it adds. oddly, I do not find it helping with low volume playing either. When you turn up the amp and cut it back with a Dulator, it sounds and feels bloated and congested to me.

I would be interested in hearing what you thought of a Dumble with just a TRex roomate in the pre out in. I think you would really dig it, although it does not compress as much. Some guys seem to really dig more compression than others, and I am not one of them! Its all personal taste, and what end result you are looking for.

Here is a clip of 183 with just a Trex. Smooth as glass, and the low notes are focused and tight to me, with chirp at exactly the places Ford gets it. The only D style amp I can say is smoother is the TwoRock emerald Pro. That remains the smoothest amp I have ever heard, but does not have quite as open a quality as the best Dumbles I have played.
http://www.soundclick.com/player/single ... i&newref=1
VERY GOOD!