Ceriatone Forum

Ceriatone => Overtone => Topic started by: Steven_nl on July 19, 2008, 10:26:15 AM



Title: A pic of my rig
Post by: Steven_nl on July 19, 2008, 10:26:15 AM
a pic of my rig
(http://home.kpnplanet.nl/~s.scholten17@kpnplanet.nl/rig2.jpg)

Steven
ps Notice the Dynacord CLS 222 GREAT!!


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: bluegate on July 19, 2008, 10:45:24 AM
Hi Steven,

Great pic, looks very good.
Quite a big step, going from Line6 to Ceriatone.
Hope you like it as much as the most of us.

Dave


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: Pickmaster on July 19, 2008, 09:07:46 PM
Lovely!
Looks great and hope sounds as well.


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: mcinku on July 19, 2008, 09:17:33 PM
Cool rig
 ;)


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: JohnE on July 21, 2008, 01:50:04 AM
a pic of my rig
(http://home.kpnplanet.nl/~s.scholten17@kpnplanet.nl/rig2.jpg)

Steven
ps Notice the Dynacord CLS 222 GREAT!!

Nice set-up. What else do you have in (on) your mini-rack, besides the G-sharp?


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: Steven_nl on July 21, 2008, 06:39:35 AM
That's the Kleinulator

I also have a Wampler EcstacyDrive, an Emma Discumbobulator, a Cry Baby 535Q and a Korg Pitchblack tuner. I use the G-sharp for reverb, delay and chorus.


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: JohnE on July 21, 2008, 03:44:10 PM
What does the Kleinulator do for you? I know it is some kind of a booster for the passive effects loop. I have listened to some clips, but they don't really differentiate between with and without the Kleinulator.   Is the kleinulator necessary to get good tone with the G Sharp?

Thanks, John


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: Steven_nl on July 21, 2008, 04:54:42 PM
Hi John
please look in my " Kleinulator coloring the sound"  topic


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: poticasoti on July 25, 2008, 09:03:04 AM
Very nice, here's a pic of mine!

(http://i218.photobucket.com/albums/cc38/poticasoti/DSCF0112.jpg)


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: Steven_nl on July 25, 2008, 09:06:02 AM
Nice!
I love that type of cab and the white knobs are cool as well.

I have decided to put the same grill cloth as my cab on the amp.


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: Nathan on July 25, 2008, 09:51:44 AM
Nice!
I love that type of cab and the white knobs are cool as well.

I have decided to put the same grill cloth as my cab on the amp.

How will you do that ?

You need to put an extra piece of wood with some tolex on it ain't it ?

I think I will do something like that, I really like how it looks with the grill coth on it.


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: Steven_nl on July 25, 2008, 10:26:59 AM
I was planning to take the front plate out and cover that with the grill cloth.
Not sure if it will fit so maybe I need to sand some wood of.

haven't been brave enough to take the amp apart. Probably will do that tomorrow


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: Steven_nl on July 27, 2008, 09:11:04 PM
OK
my sister in law put some grill cloth on my head cab. It looks like this now:

(http://home.kpnplanet.nl/~s.scholten17@kpnplanet.nl/newamp.jpg)


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: JohnE on July 27, 2008, 10:30:58 PM
Your Sister in-law does very nice work. It looks very cool with your rig.
Thanks for sharing!


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: mcinku on July 28, 2008, 05:40:41 AM
Nice job and it looks way better now.
 ;)


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: erwin_ve on July 28, 2008, 06:50:37 AM
Steven; looks better! (handige vrouwen heb je in je familie!)


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: AdrianJ on July 28, 2008, 11:27:59 AM
That head cab looks fantastic with the grill cloth on the front panel.

Was it just as simple as attaching the grill cloth to the existing piece of wood or did you have to sand the adges down a bit?


Title: Re: A pic of my rig
Post by: Steven_nl on July 28, 2008, 01:31:07 PM
Hi

actually it was "fairly" simple.
I took out the front board and removed the metal strip and the tolex on the rear and the sides (left the front tolex in place).
I went to the DIY shop and asked them to saw of a milimeter from both short sides. Actually I still had to do some serious sanding after that.

We used a staple gun to attach the cloth to the wood. starting with one of the long sides. This cloth has straight lines so aligning was fairly easy.
then we did the other long side making sure it was tight (no hard pulling! just straightning) and nicely alligned.
The hardest bit was doing the corners. you have to cut away as much fabric as possible or it will leave a thick lump in the corners. but not to much. Just f9old it tightly over the corners.
Sanded down the metal strip a bit and made sure I used the same holes when putting the nails back in.

Even I could do it.