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V30 Follow Up: A Deep Dive on the "New" Celestion Vintage 30

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  • čas přidán 17. 08. 2024
  • Ahoi! I am back with more Vintage 30 content. If you haven't seen the probably biggest Vintage 30 shootout in the world, maybe check it out here first: • World's BIGGEST Celest...
    Anyway, I wasn't satisfied with the data I had on the "new" Vintage 30s (according to Glenn Fricker) from that big test. I wasn't comfortable drawing any definitive conclusions so I bought four more new Vintage 30s to increase the sample size. I received two from February 2022 and two from December 2022. I got results that I didn't expect.
    Since several people have asked now - If you want to support me, buy me a cup of coffee or want to help me collect all the V30s in the world, you can send me a buck or two here
    paypal.me/theo...
    Feel free to write some profanity in the message
    Gear I used for this: My 2009 Gibson SG Raw Power with a Seymour Duncan Black Winter in the bridge, a Two Notes Torpedo Live for DI tracking and reamping, an Audient ID44 mk II as an interface, a Victory Kraken VX amp for the sound samples, a KSR PA50 power amp for the sweeps, Room EQ Wizard, Reaper, bx Cleansweep pro, Nugen AB Assist and Voxengo Span Plus for the analysis.
    Timestamps:
    00:00 Introduction
    02:31 Test setup
    03:39 Analysis description
    06:21 Sound sample analysis
    06:23 Comparing the sounds of the 2000 and 2019 references
    07:28 Speaker #49 2021-A sound sample
    08:40 Speaker #50 2021-B sound sample
    09:38 Speaker Feb 2022-A sound sample
    10:35 Speaker Feb 2022-B sound sample
    11:15 Speaker Dec 2022-A sound sample
    12:10 Speaker Dec 2022-B sound sample
    12:56 Analysis of the REW graphs
    15:54 My personal conclusions
    18:48 What's next?

Komentáře • 292

  • @waitin4winter
    @waitin4winter Před rokem +24

    Influencers like Glenn Fricker really ought to be more careful when they create hype like that, even if unintentional. This video was great- thanks for the thorough work you put in.

  • @mickhudson
    @mickhudson Před rokem +35

    The determination and dedication to the science is incredible. The channel is criminally underrated. Great job man. We thank you!

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +1

      Thank you! I appreciate the comment a lot

    • @montech5647
      @montech5647 Před rokem

      @@TheOtherJohnBrowne I don't understand "WHY" you pretend that 2 woofers sound "exactly the same" in the 5 kHz region... 🙄
      Until up to 1 kHz the MATCH perfectly! Why this n0n-sense obsession??

    • @rickaitkins6539
      @rickaitkins6539 Před rokem +2

      He's showing the significance of the 5-6kHz range.

    • @lieutenantdan2217
      @lieutenantdan2217 Před 6 měsíci

      In time I feel this investment will have paid off. This channel is underrated, these videos alone bring soo much to light

  • @DaltonPeters1
    @DaltonPeters1 Před rokem +14

    You're a lunatic and I'm here for it
    Thank you for doing this. Signed - Everyone

  • @chrisgoodnow9899
    @chrisgoodnow9899 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Highly underrated channel. Sense of humor is gold.

  • @LeonTodd
    @LeonTodd Před rokem +7

    MY BODY IS READY

  • @alseick
    @alseick Před rokem +23

    It is THE John Browne, the other one feels more like advertiser to me, while this is Johan Segeborn science level :D

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +17

      Just being mentioned in the same sentence as Johan Segeborn is a top tier compliment!

    • @amichaelstaleofawesomeness4738
      @amichaelstaleofawesomeness4738 Před rokem

      ​@@TheOtherJohnBrowneu deserve it man, your videos are great I discovered your channel about a month ago just because I wanted a reference for the sound of a Laney VHR 100R and decided i liked the character of the vhr over the ironheart also on reverb was 150 dollars cheaper used

  • @picksalot1
    @picksalot1 Před rokem +9

    Fascinating video, well produced, and informative. I use a Modeler (HX Stomp), and about a year ago was having trouble taming fizziness on many of my Presets. Brian Wampler replied to one of my comments, and informed me that most guitar speakers have a significant reduction in the frequency response at around 5kHz. This is something I was unaware of at the time. The Speaker Block default "High Cut" on the HX Stomp is set at 8kHz. Lowering the High Cut to 5kHz got rid of the fizziness.
    Your tests and comparisons really highlight how significant the 5-6kHz range is. Thanks

    • @MRxr400
      @MRxr400 Před rokem

      nice. I've had issues with IR's till i heard the same thing you've learnt. worlds of difference in obtaining a more natural speaker tone

    • @jublaim
      @jublaim Před 9 měsíci +1

      Good! That's why it's always good to have a broad knowledge of the stuff that makes up the signal chain. May be some lost knowledge if you dive right in to the digital stuff.

  • @oxidcustomdrums7042
    @oxidcustomdrums7042 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Thank you so much getting deep geek with this stuff and sharing with us.
    I try to think sounds as a complete product where single elements in the whole signal chain have diminishing roles. I have built a few cabs myself, recorded them in various settings and trying to make actual DATA for me to study. Too bad I have nothing saved but a CONCLUSION which your videos give support to: with speakers having this kind of differences between them, the whole difference can be thrown out the window when using a single SM57 as a mic and placing the mic a few millimeters here or there. I just ordered a brand new V30 and excited to see the batch numbers and perhaps making a signal-sweep to measure it and have a look at that 5kHz area

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 3 měsíci

      You are absolutely correct in my opinion! I'd love to hear back from you once you've tested your new V30

  • @Venemoth666
    @Venemoth666 Před měsícem +1

    i think that diffrence is made by used glue :) they probably changed it - stiffer or softer suspension of the membrane has a big impact on tone

  • @kbkman7742
    @kbkman7742 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I randomly bought a half price v30 from a local store and it is one of these early XXa code cones. Luck of the draw indeed

  • @scottpeters4401
    @scottpeters4401 Před rokem +4

    I have a set of 1987.2000,2003,and 2019 V30’s…Mine are all the Marshall variant,but they do all sound a little different…I have two from 2000 that sound smoother than all the rest…I didn’t go down the rabbit hole to the extent you did,but I started out trying to match my 87’s….then I found out the 87’s were my least favorite,Lol!!anyway,great video…Looking forward to the break in video..

  • @carter3101
    @carter3101 Před měsícem +1

    Just ordered a september 2021 Z09-444 cone code speaker, here’s to hoping it’s a good one. Thank you for all the hard work on the vid!

  • @WholeLottaBulldog
    @WholeLottaBulldog Před rokem +4

    Excellent work again my friend. I absolutely love your scientific approach. As said above, youre the German Johan Segeborn.

  • @Shred_Rocket
    @Shred_Rocket Před rokem +5

    Love your analysis on these speakers as the controversy continues. Unfortunately, most of us that are in the market for the correct version of the V30 don't have an opportunity to look at serial numbers before buying. Maybe in the used market, but not for new, at least this is my perception. The break-in speaker period vid you have planned should be an eye-opener as well! Thanks, John!

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +1

      Thanks man! Yes, it's very much luck of the draw with new speakers. I ordered the xix new speakers between April and June of this year and their production dates are up to 16 months apart

  • @zanthraxus
    @zanthraxus Před rokem +4

    At every mention of sample size I was wondering what your shopping cart at various dealers looks like...
    Seriously though - that level of dedication and detail is just insane - and thus naturally greatly appreciated!
    Having gotten new speakers this year I haven't been able to place my finger on the whole break-in topic though - so I'd love to see that!
    Cheers mate!

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +2

      I will be doing that.
      Yeah, honestly, this endeavour has been a financial catastrophe and is not sutainable 😂
      I hate to buy gear new but I just had to go down this rabbit hole. I had a lot of fun so no regrets but this has been anything than profitable financially

  • @dougb5028
    @dougb5028 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Great test and analysis. Admittedly not a large sample, but much larger than most of us would have done. Speaker break in especially with the Vintage 30 would be nice to see. I have heard it, but not graphed it, and with a much smaller sample size.

  • @claytongouin5605
    @claytongouin5605 Před rokem +2

    My hat goes off to you for the your hard work on setting this up, doing the work and analysis and sharing your results. What you're video shows is a few things, and you are correct in pointing out that your sample size is too small to make definitive statements, but the main thing is tolerances during manufacturing.
    Speaker cones are made from paper and trying to get a composite material like paper to be absolutely identical from batch to batch will be impossible. Each cone will have variances at a cellular level, and there is nothing we can do about that. The luck of the draw analysis is probably the correct one. It was a good analysis to identify that the dust cap is not responsible for this audible change, but the cone itself.
    Considering our ears are most sensitive to the 2-5kHz region (+/-), this is probably the downfall of trying to find the perfect V30 speaker and expecting that any new off-the-shelf production V30 will be so smooth. That approx. 5-6kHz spike in some V30s is what makes them sound harsh and therefore so different from the 'golden' V30.
    But, now that I know the 5-6kHz range can be problematic, I can probably correct some of that spike by either using an EQ pedal in my amp's FX loop and cut the 5-6kHz range to minimize how much of those frequencies I push into the speaker, or do the same with post-eq in my DAW.

  • @steveclark9934
    @steveclark9934 Před 9 měsíci +1

    You sir are a madman. Thanks for trying to get to the bottom of this.

  • @gelderlandproduction
    @gelderlandproduction Před rokem +5

    I would love to see the break-in test!

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +2

      I'm preparing it right now. I have another reamp box on the way wo my primary one isn't tied up for several weeks. As soon as that's here, the process can start

  • @jketterman6054
    @jketterman6054 Před rokem +7

    Id be interested to see breakin and see if that makes any tonal changes.

  • @TheChristafershawn
    @TheChristafershawn Před 11 měsíci +4

    I just checked and the two I have in a 2x12 do indeed start with Z.

  • @michaelgriffin5304
    @michaelgriffin5304 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Great effort and product.

  • @viciouswasinnocent8575
    @viciouswasinnocent8575 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Great video thanks for clearing that Fricker nonsense up.

  • @saarangnarayan123
    @saarangnarayan123 Před rokem +2

    Thanks again, mate. You are a true champion of tone. Looking forward to the break-in test!

  • @Joey.Darkwoods-Studio
    @Joey.Darkwoods-Studio Před 9 měsíci +1

    Dude, this is dedication! Well done and thank you!

  • @eds4754
    @eds4754 Před rokem +2

    Legendary stuff man, great video again!

  • @dougb5028
    @dougb5028 Před rokem +1

    great job, really like to hear the break in results

  • @PippPriss
    @PippPriss Před rokem +1

    Again, an absolutely fantastic video, and this time more concise, more to the point and sprinkled again with your personality and humour. Enjoyed it alot!

  • @TheWolvesCurse
    @TheWolvesCurse Před 8 měsíci +1

    first video i've seen on this channel, instantly subscribed. this is proper work and extremely helpful. thanks you very much for your effort.

  • @mondone1906
    @mondone1906 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Can't wait for a broke in speaker comparison, keep up the great work John!

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Thank you! I appreciate it.
      Yeah, the break in test is a bit delayed because I ran into some technical issues but I'm back on track

  • @douglasdog1
    @douglasdog1 Před 3 měsíci

    Glad I found this vid. I have one of the newer ones that sound great. Was thinking of selling it because its 16 ohm and I need an 8. Think I’ll keep it now!

  • @bestevaer1977
    @bestevaer1977 Před rokem +2

    Great Work, thanks!

  • @martin-mz2dv
    @martin-mz2dv Před rokem +2

    looking forward to the break in test

  • @VinceMusicianG
    @VinceMusicianG Před 11 měsíci +2

    I just bought an ENGL xxl cab with the "new" model v30s early 2022 with the see through dust caps and I have used the mesa cabs in the past with their uk version the new version in the engl sound great however I can not yet form an opinion on the newer v30s because one of my damn preamp tubes are microphonic so I must wait another week to crank my amp and decide. So far they sound at least as good as the v30s in the mesa cabs Ive used. I believe I have used some marshal cabs with the less liked chinese model and they did to me sound shrill and lacking in the bottom end but thats also probably because of the cabs they were in.

  • @mouseanalyse
    @mouseanalyse Před 2 měsíci

    Great video. “Spectre Debunked”😆
    Recone experiment would be the cherry on the cake, no? Where you replace the cone of a speaker that is found sounding like modern V30’s with a cone from the Fricker batch and then find it sounds like an early 2000’s V30? 🤔

  • @coryharris8417
    @coryharris8417 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I'd really like to see/hear the break in process you've discussed trying to capture. It would be very insightful, or complete myth-busting.

  • @WholeLottaBulldog
    @WholeLottaBulldog Před rokem

    Also, really looking forward to the break in test. I really think with your methodology the debate will be settled, finally.

  • @markk9184
    @markk9184 Před rokem +2

    What a nerd.....I love it!! Great experiment. Brilliant and damn interesting!!

  • @greysonferrari7553
    @greysonferrari7553 Před rokem +1

    Subscribed and will be looking out for that speaker break-in video 🤘

  • @Cpt_Adama
    @Cpt_Adama Před rokem +3

    Break-in video would definitely be cool. I’ve always wondered if this is really true or just some audiophile BS.

  • @asnark7115
    @asnark7115 Před rokem +2

    Speaker break-in over time would be the thing to see!

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +1

      That test will commence shortly. Just waiting for a second reamp box to arrive

  • @Joey.Darkwoods-Studio
    @Joey.Darkwoods-Studio Před 9 měsíci +2

    But yes, the cone is the key... the reason why older vintage speakers change tone when reconed. So this makes a lot of sense!

  • @GCKelloch
    @GCKelloch Před rokem +2

    Yes, the older V30 with more 6kHz is more fizzy, but an SM57 peaks at 6kHz. The newer V30 might sound muffled with a flatter mic.

  • @roberthastings708
    @roberthastings708 Před rokem +1

    I love this!! Thank you.

  • @simonbarth3181
    @simonbarth3181 Před 6 měsíci

    just from listening, I think that you are right the feb 2022 are closer to the old ones, but still I think the new ones sound better than the 2019 ones. That could be a total coincidence, but still, maybe they improved something.

  • @ruhrpottflo2249
    @ruhrpottflo2249 Před rokem +2

    Wow . This so awesome🎉

  • @dylangadwa3119
    @dylangadwa3119 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Hi John! Thanks for all of your amazing work. I couldn't help but notice that like myself, you also have a TwoNotes Torpedo Reload. It is seldom picked as a "shoot-out winner" against things like the Suhr Reactive Load but I am curious to know your thoughts on it. Obviously, it has far more features but if you have any insights of observations to share, I'd love to hear them.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 9 měsíci +1

      I dunno man. Mendel bij de Leij did a shootout of various load boxes a few months ago of which one was a Two Notes Torpedo Reload and he gave it a favourable assessment. I think it is a great unit and I use it frequently.
      I do however think that Two Notes missed a few opportunities to make it even sicker:
      - It annoys me that it doesn't have a thru out for the DI feature. One has to route the signal out of the DAW back into the unit in order to play an amp at the same time and no matter how powerful your computer is, there will be some latency. With a thru out it could be used exactly like a regular DI box.
      - I wish it had a thru out for a speaker cab. As it is you cannot bypass the internal load like you can on the Captor or Torpedo Live.
      - I wish it had a line in for the onboard solid state power amp in order to use it on its own, kind of like the Fryette Powerstations have. With that it could be used as a power amp for preamps or be used to create IRs.
      I am not familiar with the units internals but I can't imagine my three criticisms would have been crazy difficult or expensive to implement and with those three wishes, this already powerful unit would be insanely cool.

  • @kibagami25
    @kibagami25 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I just got myself the same speaker. Awesome information. got my sub.

  • @lost_in_gravy
    @lost_in_gravy Před 6 měsíci +1

    Actually i seem to like the sound of the year 2000 speaker the best. However, if I were in the situation of having to buy one, I'd go for the 2019 model. The fizziness, that can be heard in your lab environment will be eaten away in the rehearsal room or on stage in no time, and there is alway the posibility of eq'ing things to your liking. And what isn't there can't be added afterwards, so if I should need all those high frequencies for whatever reason, they are there in the case of the 2019, but not so with all the others

  • @Ari_Calamari
    @Ari_Calamari Před 9 měsíci +1

    Have you ever thought of modifying the fizziness on a v30 by removing some of the doping. I’ve also heard of people painting a thin layer of silicone I’ve the dust caps.
    Just some fun thoughts.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 9 měsíci

      I have not. That might be something worth looking into. Thanks

  • @doctersound9630
    @doctersound9630 Před rokem +1

    Thank you. Nice video.

  • @smithy289
    @smithy289 Před rokem +1

    Absolute madman/legend, and the best videos on youtube for the discerning tone junkie.. Would the real John Browne please stand up!
    Also, i am keen to see/hear the D-Moll get some love with your great riffs mate if you find an excuse or another amp to shoot it against! Keep killing it John!

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +1

      Thanks, mate! I really appreciate it.
      Don't worry. The D-Moll shall return. I have two ideas lined up:
      D-Moll vs Fireball (idea credit goes to Behavioural Sink). In a mix and analysis of their mid voicings. I like that as those are Diezels and Engls "entry level" metal amps (if ypu can even say that). I will definitely be doing that at some point.
      The other idea is D-Moll vs Diezels big 3 (VH4, Herbert & Hagen) but I am still on the fence on that one

    • @smithy289
      @smithy289 Před rokem

      @TheOtherJohnBrowne I look forward to the Fireball comparison. Both would be entertaining with your antics mate(like the valve boxes thrown at the Herbert) haha Great work!!

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem

      @@smithy289 lol. Glad you enjoyed that. I don't care to admit how much I made myself laugh with that stupid bit

  • @tiagoramalhais5493
    @tiagoramalhais5493 Před rokem +2

    Very interesting results, my most recent V30 is a 31A cone batch, lets hope it's a good one after i install it. Would love to see a before/after break in test, i do break them in before install with a looper as i don't actually play my guitars speakers that often so natural break in would take a long time.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem

      Based on the cone batch no. I thinknit should be one of the smoother ones.
      I'm about to start the break in test and I will be doing before, after and during sweeps and recordings

    • @soeren_LimetreeStudios
      @soeren_LimetreeStudios Před 8 měsíci

      I‘m about to buy one with a41 cone. Hopefully this one is still a smoother one :)

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 8 měsíci +1

      Chances are it is. I'd love to hear back from you once you've tried it

    • @soeren_LimetreeStudios
      @soeren_LimetreeStudios Před 8 měsíci

      @@TheOtherJohnBrowne will do! Thanks for all your work.

    • @soeren_LimetreeStudios
      @soeren_LimetreeStudios Před 7 měsíci

      I finally got the chance to test the speaker and what can I say. It is finally a tone I can work with. Im so so happy. Thanks for all your work. For me it's safe to say the A41 cone is a smoother one. I finally can compete with Nolly's IRs or even get a better tone with my setup. Now it's time to shop another speaker for the bottom of my mesa cab to have a different flavour. So long!@@TheOtherJohnBrowne

  • @irf888
    @irf888 Před rokem +1

    Definitely do a “speaker break in test” next. Based on your thoughts are you able to at least summarise the proportion of v30s over the last 20 years that sound smoother in that presence area? Eg: is 10%, 50%? Etc etc. Thanks for making this excellent video. Regards.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem

      I can't really quantify the amount but there seem to be two distinct clusters in production period. All of my speakers made between 2000 and 2003 have the smooth character. 2004 is hit or miss and 2001s seem to have the tendency to be quite dark.
      The second cluster seems to be quite recent around 2021/2022. Look for cones of which the batch designation starts with Z or A (after the numbers for those).

  • @dansboutique26
    @dansboutique26 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Cones are paper…paper is wood…all woods are different…each batch will be different…so every speaker will be different. Thats my simple brain conclusion.

  • @pedrolourenco2707
    @pedrolourenco2707 Před 8 měsíci

    I remember there's a ponit on the video we're you kinda change your mind due to what you're seeing, not hearing! I'm sure you know that's the most common error for sound engineers. I do it also, but I was fortune to start in the old analog/ tape world.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 8 měsíci

      I changed my mind in regards to context. In the previous large test I had placed that speaker more with the 2004 to 2020 speakers but on further inspection it did sound smoother than those in this test.

    • @pedrolourenco2707
      @pedrolourenco2707 Před 8 měsíci

      @@TheOtherJohnBrowne many shades of V30s and to me the vast majority sound pretty good and useful, if your willing to move some knobs (just a couple of dbs)!

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 8 měsíci

      100% agree

  • @TVoltG
    @TVoltG Před 9 měsíci +1

    I bought 4 the beginning of 2022..all four start with Z.. I was pleasantly happy with them. I bought them to sell an empty Marshall cab I had..i sold the cab, kept the speakers..😂

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Great score! Oddly, I had a similar experience. I wanted a cab for testing speakers in. I was going to sell the speakers once I had the cab but they were great Marshall G12 Vintages with Z cones from 2021 and I ended up keeping the all

    • @TVoltG
      @TVoltG Před 9 měsíci

      @@TheOtherJohnBrowne it's such a nightmare. 😂
      💸💸💸 flys away more than comes in.. 😂

  • @jcwear89
    @jcwear89 Před rokem +1

    Absolutely love your deep dive stuff. Thank you for making the investment to find the truth! Now you need to go down the deep dive of reconing the ones that sound meh, see if they become magic.
    And where to source cones from?
    Incidentally I work in the paper industry so I'm curious to know what the composition is, and why the cones are so different 🤔

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +1

      I believe it has both to do with the actual wood fibre that varies and changes to the production processes.
      That is a few more deep dives in there. Let's see how restless I become 😂
      Thanks for commenting!

  • @mateustatsch600
    @mateustatsch600 Před 7 měsíci

    awesome video!

  • @someone_else303
    @someone_else303 Před rokem +1

    Guys, you wanna know a secret? There are no speakers that have the exact same sound. In the factory this is called tolerance.

  • @marvelharris9540
    @marvelharris9540 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for continuing to demystify the v30 mythology.. the celestion rep told me in an email months ago that they haven't changed a thing and any differences are natural from one speaker to the next. Oh and that goes for the supposed "mesa" version speaker too.

    • @sparella
      @sparella Před 11 měsíci

      But that is clearly false, as evidenced by the change in dust caps.

    • @marvelharris9540
      @marvelharris9540 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@sparella they are back using the regular dust caps now.. must have been a run of what they had.

  • @justinvzu01
    @justinvzu01 Před rokem +1

    It's interesting to see the differences, but EQ solves all the issues anyways. Don't bother looking for certain year speakers, just get a well matched pair and EQ to your liking. Throwing an EQ in the FX loop of your amp always does wonders.

  • @SuperGuitar38
    @SuperGuitar38 Před rokem

    I have two 4x12" cabs of them from 97'. Always loved them and glad i'm not in this "is it the same?"prob. LOL! Very diff sounding speakers for sure.

    • @lordgraga
      @lordgraga Před rokem +1

      My 4x12 ENGL cab with V30 speakers from mid 96 is my favourite cab ever, so I'm not surprised.

  • @jaychen2000metal
    @jaychen2000metal Před 9 měsíci

    The WGS Retro 30 is a v 30 with low mids. Best speakers i ever had...

  • @youztuber5000
    @youztuber5000 Před rokem +1

    Back in the old days, guys would slash the speaker cone for a "better" sound (Hendrix, for example), I wonder if modifications or different cones could help tailor the V30 better, or at least get something new and interesting out of them. I've heard cleaning some of the excess doping off with solvent can change the tone for the better.
    What makes a cone sound good?

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +2

      That question isn't easy to answer. I think the cone plays a massive role in that and I imagine it is the most difficult part to produce with consistently.
      I would say stiffness and mass play a big role which are influenced by thickness, density of the fibres, fibre length, distribution and probably by the process used to form the cone.
      Doping affects the tone too. The Bad Cat OEM V30s had their doping removed and they were the only OEM V30 that I was able to determine sounded a little different.
      There are certain paints/doping you can brush onto the speakers that change the tone. Inversely, some people apply fine sandpaper to the cones to change the tone. Johan Segeborn did an experiment like that on his channel.
      Ignacio from Jensen spoke about the effects of cone thickness in a video on Kohlekeller Studios youtube channel. Both videos are really worth watching

  • @guitarman1470
    @guitarman1470 Před 5 měsíci

    Try a video of Vintage 30 UK model vs. Chinese model. I use the UK versions for my stage rigs. I would love to hear the comparison.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 5 měsíci

      Check a few videos back where I compared 53 different V30 variants including UK V30s from the 80s and 90s

  • @thenumber1bobo
    @thenumber1bobo Před rokem +2

    how do you not have more subs

  • @iancurrie8844
    @iancurrie8844 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Big surprise: Glenn is full of it. I knew that as soon as his "all pickups sound the same" nonsense started.

  • @void_snw
    @void_snw Před rokem +2

    Considering these cones are paper ish material, I wonder how much extreme differences in humidity could affect things.

  • @roberthastings708
    @roberthastings708 Před rokem +3

    For me, I much prefer an Eminence to Celestion. I have a few Eminence models in 12s and 10s. The Eminence GB 12 and Governor in a 2x12 box is much smoother, but I know many like the Marshall/Celestion sound. One mans ice pick is another's ice cream.

  • @EDWINPIERCE168
    @EDWINPIERCE168 Před 11 měsíci +1

    If you run pink noise into two speakers, and adjust one speaker to phase cancel the other, two identical speakers should be perceived as silent, right? They’re not identical but running the best against the worst should get progressively quieter as the bad speaker breaks in, right? Or running two nearly identical speakers out of phase to look for changes. Might not have to listen to the same loop for months, it’d possibly be quieter, might have the same end result by just looking for measurable change.

  • @pedrolourenco2707
    @pedrolourenco2707 Před 8 měsíci

    Dear john, from my long experience with spectrum analysers (+20 years now) , yes they shows what we are hearing and helps us visualysing it, but we always hear things that somehow don't translate in graphs. Remember they make some interpolation of peaks and rms ... (2 + 4 )/ 2 = 6 the same way (4+2) /2 =6.... getting my point? give less importance to the graph and more to what you're hearing! Very nice video though!

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 8 měsíci

      Cool! What's your background, mate?
      That's pretty much how I used the graph tools - to guide me to areas I need to listen closely to by using filtering to isolate certain frequency bands. In my opinion it lined up pretty well with the audible differences and Voxengo SPAN and REW pretty much delivered the same results. Can you hear anything in particular that is not accounted for in the graphs?

    • @pedrolourenco2707
      @pedrolourenco2707 Před 8 měsíci

      @@TheOtherJohnBrowne you're using the right tools and aproch but I remember there's a ponit on the video we're you kinda change your mind due to what you're seeing, not what you're hearing! I'm sure you know that's the most common error for sound engineers. I do it also, but I was fortune to start in the old analog/ tape world.

  • @GuitarIv69
    @GuitarIv69 Před 9 měsíci

    Ok. So if I take an EQ pedal, throw it in the loop and reduce the volume in the 5-6k hertz range, should that reduce the fizz as well? I guess I learned something! Thanks man 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 8 měsíci +1

      That could work. I've never tried it as I don't have an EQ pedal

  • @talhafatihuzun
    @talhafatihuzun Před rokem

    For break in, I suggest using lower bass frequencies for better break in. Just based on personal experience, true or not, debatable.

  • @HLBmusix
    @HLBmusix Před rokem +1

    Great video! The one thing i'd still like to know is, since we now know the major difference is in the 5-6kHz range, can you eq the differences away? If yes, i wouldn't care too much about the batch. I'd just use some eq to get the sound i want.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +1

      I am not great at mixing so I can't say for sure. At the same time, I don't see a reason why not but supposedly it's best practice to get it right at the source level

    • @sparella
      @sparella Před 11 měsíci +1

      A -5dB band shelf between 5 and 6k might do the trick.

    • @sparella
      @sparella Před 9 měsíci

      Btw, most EQs are not capable of band shelves, especially such a narrow one.

  • @kittysox8463
    @kittysox8463 Před 17 dny

    I have a set of new production speakers that I just got from Mesa and the cone reads 37A-0444. I was wondering if you had any in your shootout that matched that.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 17 dny

      @@kittysox8463 yeah. My early 2022 smooth ones were in that ballpark

  • @Kanthon
    @Kanthon Před 2 měsíci

    Bro said “tone is in the cone".

  • @Stefan-
    @Stefan- Před rokem +1

    Not surpricing at all that its probably mostly about tolerances, speakers are after all to a big part mechanical.

  • @Findyournextguitar
    @Findyournextguitar Před 5 měsíci +1

    it makes the most sense it's just supply chain issues giving the 2019-2022 lockdowns - in general I've seen a lot of quality discrepencies in lots of products and for the business where I work there have been issues getting and the same supplies or even same quality supplies - especailly in regard to cardborad boxes - since cones are made of paper it'd make the most sense that for a time they had to make a slight change in materials - I do thing were going to see much more variances like this in the future as well.
    The other factor could possibly be - idk if you did any electrical tests on the speakers, but I'd be curious how much of a variance there was in the actual magnets - or if the older speakers have the same freqencies compared to the newest ones - magnets do lose charge over time in general as well as if they are dropped so it could be a factor in the sound as well - they could have a different metalergy blend as well - there's so many factors aside from ripping them apart and testing everything idk you will get to the bottom of it - but I think we can assume the change was due to supply chain issues as well as we can probably expect more change in future speakers.
    I suppose that's partly why I'm kinda partial to eminence since they are largely still assembled in the US
    Also I'd be curious your opinion - I've kinda always really disliked the celestion 70/80's speakers - the speaker not the era in time - but it seems for metal that'd be more the sound your might want? Is that the case or are those even still too muddy for metal?

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 5 měsíci

      I like your theory about the supply chain issues. It sounds entirely plausible and likely to me given the circumstances of the time.
      I was not able to test things like the strength of the magnets as I don't have the means. At the same time I believe ferrite magnets as used in these speakers lose their magnetism so slowly that many consider them to have almost permanent magnetism.
      I did check the DC resistance of all of the V30s I had and the values were pretty much identical. I suppose I could have checked the inductance too but didn't think of that.
      I am convinced the variance mostly comes from the paper cones. We're pretty decent at metallurgy as a culture at least for these applications and are able to manufacture metals and coils very consistenly which is why I don't believe it's the magnets and/or voice coils in this case.
      I appreciate all your insightful and detailed comments!

  • @johnathan.jerusik
    @johnathan.jerusik Před 10 měsíci

    I have a early 90s 1960 cab with 4 v30s in it, made in UK and they sounded like the 2019 models. Now i know theres not realy a "difference" with the mesa uk celestions. But the mesa sounds more like the early 2000s one.

  • @JimijaymesProductions
    @JimijaymesProductions Před rokem +1

    While all the speakers still sound different I'd put the early 2022s in the category or aggressive compared to the harsh and noisy 2019 and the later 2022 models. Some are smoother than others but I'd be happy with any of them but that 2019 speaker and what seems like the newest ones especially one of those 2022 december speakers hurts my ears and is everything about v30s that got hate for years. If celestion can't be consistent at least can they reissue the v30mf because that speaker rocks and has room to be slightly harsher.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem

      I agree but the more I dig, the more I suspect that Celestion can't be blamed. I get the impression that 90% of the variance I have seen in my tests come from the cone. Maybe Celestion is at the mercy of the cone manufacturer here.
      I believe Celestion had a surplus of Vintage 30 MFs but as they were Marshall OEM speakers, they couldn't be sold as such so the relabled them. I am 99% sure that the G12-60S Special Edition is a relabled Vintage 30MF. TAD had them for a while and I believe there is a retailer in Spain that still has some and is selling for lesd than what a regular V30 costs.

    • @JimijaymesProductions
      @JimijaymesProductions Před rokem

      @@TheOtherJohnBrowne interesting, I've seen the tad ones but they are all being sold for super inflated prices online along with the Marshall labelled ones. Might have to do some more digging.
      That makes sense most of the biggest changes in celestion history are the cones, it's just such a sensitive range for guitat that it almost sounds like a different speaker when the cones differ.

  • @lespaul667
    @lespaul667 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Am I right to say some have 1777 cones and some have 444 cones? That’s a difference between a lead and a bass speaker, at least back in the day.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 9 měsíci

      There was an OEM version of the Vintage 30 made for Hughes & Kettner in the early 2000s and possibly late 90s. These however are long out of production. All other V30 have and have had 444 cones. I show some of the H&K speakers in this video czcams.com/video/EhrSlRhFsR8/video.htmlsi=R8jbPOwcM5L9NELU

  • @EDWINPIERCE168
    @EDWINPIERCE168 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Seems like the mass of the cone might impact the frequency response. If the highs are harsh, what would tape or drum dampening gel like moon gel do to the high frequencies? Differential effects of inertia and momentum on a cone’s frequency spectrum and whatnot.
    I’m sometimes curious too about how the number of frequencies coming through a speaker affect any particular frequency, if at all.
    Will a harsh and a soft speaker respond the same way to a sine way oscillating only one harsh frequency? Or do other simultaneous frequencies from the same speaker affect the harsh frequencies?

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 11 měsíci +2

      These are great questions for follow up tests. Reducing or increasing the cone mass definitely will affect the sound. That's why speaker doping is a thing. Johan Segeborn took some sandpaper to a Greenback reissue in one of his vids a few years ago and the effect that had was very noticeable if I recall correctly.

  • @Ianos-Music
    @Ianos-Music Před 10 měsíci +1

    Anyone else catch the Monty Python reference? 😂
    Informative video. 👍🏻

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 10 měsíci +2

      You might only be the second person to do so

    • @Ianos-Music
      @Ianos-Music Před 10 měsíci

      I don’t understand how some people get through life without repeatedly watching hours of MP sketches😮

  • @Jarrodpimental
    @Jarrodpimental Před rokem +1

    Wow. So do I hold on to the good ones I’m selling right now?

  • @justingallion4902
    @justingallion4902 Před rokem

    Awesome comparison, but I believe I was hearing some of the bleed off from your headphones into the mic, do you notice that?

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem

      I muted my vocal mic in editing when the speakers samples were being played and only blended it back in when I said something while a sample was playing.
      The voice over and the screen recording with the speaker samples were recorded using two seperate computers. There was no microphone connected to the main computer playing back the speaker audio at the time of recording the screen so it seems unlikely that there would be bleed from the headphones

  • @dirtyfreaks5
    @dirtyfreaks5 Před rokem +1

    Hey! Looking for the comparison of the Mamzer30 speakers. How do you like them?

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +1

      I have installed a 16 Ohm one in my Zilla 2x12. I have yet to try it. Will install the 8 Ohmone too shortly and give them both a decent run.

    • @dirtyfreaks5
      @dirtyfreaks5 Před rokem

      @@TheOtherJohnBrowne Do you think there will be a diffrence in sound between the same speaker but diffrent impedance?
      I want to buy one, and my amp can handlle both so I'm curious if should choose one over another .
      Thx

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem

      @@dirtyfreaks5 Yes. The 16 Ohm version will have slightly less mids and the tendency for a slightly elevated top end.

  • @divebomb99
    @divebomb99 Před rokem +1

    Meant to ask- Did you notice any patterns/differences in the U.K. vs. Chinese-made V30s during your journey? Or do you believe that too boils down to cone composition?

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +1

      If they were made during the same period i.e. used the same or similar cone batches, they were pretty much the same. I have since been told by reliable sources that they use different glues in the UK and China speakers which have a minimal effect on the tone but that is so small that is drowned out by manufacturing tolerances.
      For all intents and purposes UK made and Chinese made speakers from the same period sound the same

    • @divebomb99
      @divebomb99 Před rokem

      @@TheOtherJohnBrowne Danke. This confirms my suspicion.

  • @Starch1b2c3d4a
    @Starch1b2c3d4a Před rokem

    Great video. Are new mesa v30’s close to the early 2000’s?

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem

      The ones that have Z batch and early xxA batch cones likely will. There doesn't seem to be any difference between Mesa and regular V30 other than production location (which doesn't appear to affect the tone in any significant way) and the orientation of the sticker on the back cover.

  • @daniloberserk
    @daniloberserk Před měsícem

    What's the code on the cones of december 2022 units? Mine reads 03B.0444

  • @heinzketchup8489
    @heinzketchup8489 Před rokem +1

    Nice video! Went pretty anal about V30 and got myself a late 2001 Mesa 4x12 cab I`m very happy with.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +1

      Awesome! I too recently got one loaded with 2003 V30s and feel the same. Congrats on the killer new cab

  • @PaulEubanks
    @PaulEubanks Před rokem +1

    Celestion just cobbles all their jank together with whatever they can get their hands on. Their quality control isn't thorough enough to say the least.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 11 měsíci +2

      The phrase "cobbling jank together" is hilarious! Thank you for that!

  • @wootks
    @wootks Před rokem

    My transparent dustcap v30 has 37a-444 on the cone. Date code is CH18. Guessing it will be a lot harder to identify a "good" one short of hearing it...

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem

      It will be hard without a reference. Your cones are pretty close to my Feb 22s so you're probably lucky

    • @wootks
      @wootks Před rokem

      @@TheOtherJohnBrowne I do think it sounds pretty close to my 2000-2003 speakers, but I have never measured it to get any empirical data.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem

      @@wootks At the end of the day, all that matters is that it sounds good to you which it sounds like it does

  • @divebomb99
    @divebomb99 Před rokem +1

    "It's all in the cones and composition of the cones. Which changes from batch to batch." - Which begs the question do other manufacturers experience the same issue, or is it a product of the way Celestion defines their tolerances? Also has me wondering if Celestion has more than one paper manufacturer contracted, which might explain some of the variances.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +1

      That is an excellent question and I'd love to know the answer.
      I just can't afford 40 Eminence Governors at the moment 😅

    • @divebomb99
      @divebomb99 Před rokem

      @@TheOtherJohnBrowne My hunch is that they all "suffer" from it to one degree or another. The paper has wood product in it (plus whatever other materials) and like back-to-back guitars coming off the assembly line, wood will sound different no matter how hard you try to minimize it. Once again, absolutely amazing work and dedication on your part. I would think you've got some sales and engineering folks sweating a bit at the Celestion offices!

    • @3rett115
      @3rett115 Před rokem

      @@divebomb99 This would be the way to truly answer if the differences are from manufacture or not. The only thing I'm skeptical about is the fact all the speakers are identical up to about 5k. So what are the chances that the variations in cone material only affects this range?

    • @divebomb99
      @divebomb99 Před rokem

      @@3rett115 Good stuff. We can only guess. My guess is that it's the way the speaker materials resonate and/or react at those naturally occurring frequencies. Then the other half of my brain tells me that when we get to this level of dissection and analysis that it's time to cut the cord and get back to focusing on the fretboard! haha. 🙂

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem

      My theory is that it has to do with the stiffness of the cone. Most guitar speakers frequency responses are only specified up to 5 kHz. Most speakers efficiency take a hefty dive at that point. I believe more or less stiffness in the cone could shift the point at where this drop off happens in one or the other way. Stiffness could be affected by the material composition and/or the production process

  • @jamanjeval
    @jamanjeval Před rokem +1

    Since the difference seems to be pretty well defined, can the presence/treble eq on the amp or daw compensate to make them indistinguishable? The differences were so pronounced, I could clearly hear the differences on iPad speakers. But I’ve heard this kind of fizzyness on real amps and it wasn’t hard to compensate for.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem +1

      I've been wondering that myself to be honest. I haven't mixed/post EQ'd guitars in years and I keep hearing stories from producers that just can't get later V30s to sound liie the golden age but ton be honest. I don't see a reason why one or the other EQ method wouldn't work.
      You know what? I'm going to make another test about that.

    • @jamanjeval
      @jamanjeval Před rokem +1

      @@TheOtherJohnBrowne maybe it would be another video, but you can also try tricks like putting things between the mic and speaker like tissue paper, paper towels, wash rags, sponge and so on with increasing absorption to see how that takes the treble. I worked with a guitarist who used various layers of tissue paper (not Kleenex, but that super thin paper that is nearly transparent) to tame the treble because he claimed EVH did it.

    • @Venemoth666
      @Venemoth666 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​​@@jamanjevali did that with my eminence - man of war. home made diffusors in cabinet and fizzy was gone :)

  • @andrewbecker3700
    @andrewbecker3700 Před rokem +1

    I think the biggest thing we've learned is that everything Glen Fricker says needs to be taken with a grain of salt. Opinions are like assholes, and some people have bad gas. My opinion has been the same for 40 years. The condition of the speaker, and specifically the actual cone assembly itself, will go through its natural break in period, differently, everytime, guaranteed. The variances being measured all fall into the acceptable range of normal frequencies for the speaker. In other words, find speakers you "think" sound good/better and swap them into your favorite cab, like every good guitarist has forever, and rock out. Peace.

  • @endtimeguitarist
    @endtimeguitarist Před rokem

    How can you find out what year the speakers are? I see the numbers but where can you reference? There’s a cab I saw but I’m afraid to buy it because I’m concerned whether or not they would give me the correct year.

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před rokem

      There will be an alphanumerical date code either on the white sticker on the side of the speakers magnet or a stamp on the frame if the speaker was made before 2001.
      Here's what the codes mean:
      celestion.com/blog/date-codes-how-old-is-my-speaker/

  • @jamescassidy4045
    @jamescassidy4045 Před 5 měsíci

    Have you played many 8 ohm 90 or 91 V30's? If so what are your thoughts?

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 5 měsíci

      Actually just one. I think I have an 8 Ohm V30 from 91. I don't think I have tried more than the one from 91 or ones 1990. I like the sound of it though

  • @pedrolourenco2707
    @pedrolourenco2707 Před 8 měsíci

    you gotta get a sandpaper and remove some material of the cones like Johan Segeborn dis on a video

    • @TheOtherJohnBrowne
      @TheOtherJohnBrowne  Před 8 měsíci

      Yeah I saw that video. Very cool results. I figure that alters the stiffness and to an extent the mass of the cone which will habe a noticeable effect on the tone

  • @mateustatsch600
    @mateustatsch600 Před 7 měsíci

    an addendum to your conclusion at the end of the video (or inconclusion haha), from your list you can see that both china and uk from the early 2000s are good, at the same time as those from the 2010s', china or uk, are bad (general speacking took by your comenst on the list). I think the tip is to look for the old speakers, or try your luck with the new batches from 2021, 2022, some of them were actually good.