Gives you solid state reliability with great tube emulation.
The BBE BMAX Solid State Bass Guitar Preamplifier is a
high-quality bass preamp/processor with advantages in the recording studio and
in demanding live applications. It features a class A/B front end that emulates
the loading effect of a classic tube preamp. It also has a pure and clean
electronically-balanced DI output.
The BBE Process--"What it
Is"
Loudspeakers have difficulty working with the electronic
signals supplied by an amplifier. These difficulties cause such major phase and
amplitude distortion that the sound reproduced by the speaker differs
significantly from the sound produced by the original source.
In the past,
these problems proved unsolvable and were thus relegated to a position of
secondary importance in audio system design. However, phase and amplitude
integrity is essential to accurate sound reproduction. Research shows that the
information which the listener translates into the recognizable characteristics
of a live performance are intimately tied into complex time and amplitude
relationships between the fundamental and harmonic components of a given musical
note or sound. These relationships define a sound's "sound".
When these
complex relationships pass through a speaker, the proper order is lost. The
higher frequencies are delayed. A lower frequency may reach the listener's ear
first or perhaps simultaneously with that of a higher frequency. In some cases,
the fundamental components may be so time-shifted that they reach the listener's
ear ahead of some or all of the harmonic components.
This change in the phase
and amplitude relationship on the harmonic and fundamental frequencies is
technically called "envelope distortion." The listener perceives this loss of
sound integrity in the reproduced sound as "muddy" and "smeared." In the
extreme, it can become difficult to tell the difference between musical
instruments, for example, an oboe and a clarinet.
BBE Sound, Inc. conducted
extensive studies of numerous speaker systems over a ten year period. With this
knowledge, it became possible to identify the characteristics of an ideal
speaker and to distill the corrections necessary to return the fundamental and
harmonic frequency structures to their correct order. While there are
differences among various speaker designs in the magnitude of their correction,
the overall pattern of correction needed is remarkably consistent.
The BBE
Process is so unique that 42 patents have been awarded by the U.S. Patent
Office.