Screamingdaisy
(O)))m
About a month and a half ago I picked up a P245. It was a great sounding guitar; a little on the bright side, but nothing I couldn't work with. The big standouts were that relative to my McCarty the P245 had a lot more upper mids and a lot less bottom end.
About a week ago I noticed the P245 started to push a little more low end. I thought I might've been hearing things, but it's started to get that low end "lug" that a Les Paul typically produces, and it's become more prominent over time.
Over the last 2-3 days the treble has cut back and it seems to have filled out in the low midrange. I've gone from the guitar being too bright and typically running the tone around 5 to being able to run it on 10 and still getting a good sound.
Throughout this time my McCarty has sounded consistent, and I've used it to verify that I'm hearing what I think I'm hearing and that it's not just the day to day changes an amp can produce. Relative to the McCarty the P245 has consistently grown darker and bigger sounding over time.
I've never had an electric "break in" before... didn't think it was really a thing.
About a week ago I noticed the P245 started to push a little more low end. I thought I might've been hearing things, but it's started to get that low end "lug" that a Les Paul typically produces, and it's become more prominent over time.
Over the last 2-3 days the treble has cut back and it seems to have filled out in the low midrange. I've gone from the guitar being too bright and typically running the tone around 5 to being able to run it on 10 and still getting a good sound.
Throughout this time my McCarty has sounded consistent, and I've used it to verify that I'm hearing what I think I'm hearing and that it's not just the day to day changes an amp can produce. Relative to the McCarty the P245 has consistently grown darker and bigger sounding over time.
I've never had an electric "break in" before... didn't think it was really a thing.