Ladies and Gentlemen! Welcome to the bout of the century! A truly momentous occasion in the vein of David versus Goliath! In the red corner we have a Goliath, the reigning King of Attenuators, the Ultimate Attenuator; self-proclaimed King of Transparency – Guaranteed! In the blue corner is the Aracom Power Rox PRX150-Pro, a virtual David, armed with only a transparency sling ! And here’s the opening bell!
The Ultimate Attenuator strikes first, tongue lolling, with bombastic claims of pure transparency. The agile Power Rox ducks, and moves away, its sling of true transparency whirring rapidly. Wait! It launches! It strikes the Ultimate Attenuator square in the head. It’s going down! Oh the humanity! Oh the humanity! The match was over before it was even begun!
I had the great opportunity this evening of testing the Aracom Power Rox and the Ultimate Attenuator in a head-to-head shootout to determine which was the most transparent attenuator. As you can tell from the somewhat facetious and fictitious pseudo-boxing match, you know who won: The Aracom Power Rox PRX150-Pro. Folks, it wasn’t even a contest. Even at the lowest attenuation levels, the Power Rox swept the floor with the Ultimate Attenuator!
My Test Procedures
Equipment: My test was conducted using a Replica JTM45 equipped with original Mustard Caps and a pair of KT-66’s, into a 4 X 12 cabinet equipped with (2) Original 55Hz Greenbacks and (2) Custom Weber (75Hz) Greenbacks, with a ‘Gibson 57 Les Paul Historic Goldtop as my test guitar.
Clean Test
First, I started with the amp totally clean. I strummed a simple chord progression to get my base tone. Setting the Ultimate Attenuator at about half “volume,” I activated it. I immediately noticed a distinct loss in both highs and lows, as even at minimal attenuation, the bandwidth of my tone was severely narrowed. The full bottom-end and sparkly top-end of my clean tone were significantly reduced. The tone wasn’t that bad, mind you, but it certainly lacked the richness of my base tone – it sounded flat.
One thing that really bugged me was activating the UA, which required a strumming the guitar, then switching on the UA, as if the UA needed a signal to pass through it to even start working. What a pain! It’s amazing that users would even tolerate this.
I repeated the same test with the Power Rox, setting it at half attenuation on the 6-way switch. The result was a reduced volume, but no loss of bottom- or top-end at all.
Clean Test – Bedroom Mode
Same test as above with both attenuators. With the Ultimate Attenuator, can you say “tone sucker?” The tone was not at all pleasing! Even more narrow bandwidth, and non-existent dynamics. There was nothing even remotely good to like at this level with the UA. How the UA website can claim to be “the most transparent and safest tube amplifier attenuator on the market in the world. Guaranteed” is beyond me. Even my old Dr. Z Airbrake sounded better than the UA. So again, at this level, the Power Rox just kicked ass. Lower volume, but full retention of bandwidth and dynamics.
Dirty Tests
In my dirty tests, I ran the amp in its drive channel cranked up fully. 40 Watts through a 4 X 12 is LOUD!!! Especially when you’re standing right in front of the cab! Actually there’s nothing like feeling the SPL’s with an amp full-out! I ran the same tests as I did with the clean channel with both attenuators, and as expected got the same results: The Ultimate Attenuator really sucked my tone, while the PRX150-Pro retained tone and dynamics at all levels. The Plexi switch just made the tone even worse, acting like a treble booster, which made an already horrid tone even worse by just upping the highs. The tone was akin to an old transistor radio played at the volume of a loud TV. Not pleasing at all, and actually, it was a bit annoying, like cats screeching! YUCK!
The Power Rox, on the other hand, again just reduced the volume. The tone remained rich and full, and all the overtones and harmonics came through. It’s amazing what those subtleties do for your tone. You really miss them when they’re not there, as they provide depth.
It’s evident that the Power Rox’s Speaker Reactance Thru technology is far superior at any application. For me, the Ultimate Attenuator company can make all the claims it wants about transparency, but that’s all they are: claims. And while it doesn’t sound all that bad at low attenuation levels, the marked difference in tone between the UA and Power Rox at any attenuation level relegates the UA – at least to me – to the junk heap. You couldn’t get me to put this in my rig if you paid me.
I realize that the UA was the best game in town for quite awhile, and I am sure that at the time it came out, it outperformed the THD HotPlate, which I have also tested, and didn’t like. I also realize that I’m being fairly harsh – much more harsh than I’ve ever been with a product – but all the claims of the UA being truly transparent are mere exaggerations, and not backed up by any discussion of its technology. In fact, all the hyperbole surrounding the UA is quite irritating!
If you knew what went into a UA, you’d have serious concerns, not the least of which is the 32 ohm fixed resistor, which essentially flattens out your impedance, and creates a mismatch so high that you could fry your amp! Adding insult to injury, the solid-state amplifier is what is really running your speaker. Transparent? Hell no! Not electronically, and definitely not audibly.
And mind you, I’m not the only person who feels this way. One new PRX150-Pro user, who is also a former UA user was so impressed with the Power Rox and disgusted by the UA’s tone compared to the Power Rox, that he bought two Power Rox’s! That says quite a bit.
For more information about the Aracom Power Rox PRX150-Pro, visit the Aracom Amps PRX150-Pro product page!
I can finally weigh in on this; my amp set up is a Komet Concorde and Mojave 2×12 Cab with NOS original English built Celestion G12H 30 speakers. My main guitar is a 74′ LP custom, burstbucker pups wired up with the vintage upgrade kit from RS guitar works. The Komet is a truly special amp. It’s a non master volume amp and is incredibly loud. The variety of tones just from the volume control on the guitar is amazing. At 3-4 you get gorgeous chimey cleans. 5-7 a nice growl starts to emerge, 7-8 gets a great crunch, and 10 sends it into dream world. What’s great too is there is not a huge drop off in overall volume at the lower guitar volume settings so there’s plenty of headroom to play with. The amp is incredibly expressive. Even with the guitar volume on 10, variations in pick attack yield subtle changes in tone, harmonics and volume and every string rings out distinctively in chords. The Les Paul sounds amazing through this amp and so does my PRS. All that was destroyed with the Ultimate Attenuator. I won’t even go into how awful that unit is.
I finally got my Aracom last week and the difference is night and day. There is an ever so slight difference between the clean unattenuated tone and the attenuated tone set with the least amount of attenuation. That said, all of the beautiful characteristics of the tone are preserved. The bedroom level feature is nice and preserves the tone as well but the loss of head room takes away from the experience of the amp. There are 6 levels of step attenuation from A (least amount) to F (most amount, variable control down to bedroom level). At step E, I hear everything I want to hear coming from my amp. All of the overtones, harmonics, string separation, variation in tone with volume control changes on the guitar etc. I haven’t gigged with it yet, but I can see step D will probably do the trick for most small venues. I’m a tone lover through and through and this is the best I’ve heard so with that in mind I’m overlooking the fact that it’s the size of a small amp head.
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I have one PRX150-Pro and really appreciate it 🙂