mjh36
Well-known member
Built this from a thread by JohnH on the marshall forum. This one is built for 50 watts. On front is a line-out with volume and three -dB switches. On the back is the input and two 8 ohm and one 16 ohm outputs.
It's -7dB when you plug into it, with switches for an extra -7dB, -14dB, and -3.5dB, which can be used in any combination. When all are engaged it's -31.5 dB total and safe to use as a loadbox and unplug the speaker. I added a line out for pedals/IR's.
It's a really excellent thread. I went the spendier but faster route and ordered the resistors and Hammond enclosure from Mouser, plus a few things from Parts Express and Tayda. Cost about $130, a steal for a reactive loadbox!
I have not tested it yet because I don't own a tube amp, but it reads out correct on my multimeter. Added the umbrellas to help with cooling.
www.marshallforum.com
It's -7dB when you plug into it, with switches for an extra -7dB, -14dB, and -3.5dB, which can be used in any combination. When all are engaged it's -31.5 dB total and safe to use as a loadbox and unplug the speaker. I added a line out for pedals/IR's.
It's a really excellent thread. I went the spendier but faster route and ordered the resistors and Hammond enclosure from Mouser, plus a few things from Parts Express and Tayda. Cost about $130, a steal for a reactive loadbox!
I have not tested it yet because I don't own a tube amp, but it reads out correct on my multimeter. Added the umbrellas to help with cooling.
Simple Attenuators - Design And Testing
Background Passive attenuators are wired between the amp output and the speakers. Their function is to absorb most of the output power of the amp, feeding a smaller amount to the speaker itself. This allows the amp output stage to run at higher power, letting the glorious tone of a good valve...





