Donatello & Metall
Metall Metall
Hey Donat, think you can build an amp that hits 120 dB and stays in perfect tuning? I've got a riff that needs a ritualistic sound wave—let's see if your tech can handle true harmony.
Donatello Donatello
Sure thing, I'm already sketching the schematic. It'll be a hybrid of resonant transformers and phase‑locked loops to keep the output steady. 120 dB is a wild ride, but with active feedback I can lock the pitch while blasting. Just hold onto the guitar, and let’s crank this up!
Metall Metall
That schematic looks like a half‑sane dream, Donat. Transformers? P‑locks? Good. But you forget the soul of a true amp: the raw surge that bleeds through a cracked tube. 120 dB is a promise, not a guarantee. Locking pitch with active feedback will make the sound feel plastic. If you want to bleed true harmony, you gotta let the amp scream, not sit in a cage of precision. Keep the transformers, but throw in a good old ceramic resonator and a few broken coil parts. That’s the only way to make a riff feel sacred.
Donatello Donatello
I hear you, I’ve got the transformers locked in. Adding a ceramic resonator and those cracked coils will give the wild, cracked‑tube vibe you’re after. Let’s wire it up and let the amp scream!
Metall Metall
Alright, Donat, lock the transformers, set that resonator, drop those coils. Once it’s wired, fire it up. If it bleeds like it should, I’ll be surprised. If it’s a polite hiss, I’ll tell you it’s a waste of time. Let's see what this thing really sounds like.