I prefer to have my amp raised off the floor.
How to get my amp off the floor.
I use a 200 watt combo with 2x10 speakers and a tweeter and to me it sounds dead on the floor.
So setting amps directly on the floor is not a problem in and of itself as long as the floor amp interface gets the job done.
I like the additional height of the amp stand so i use it.
Oftentimes players will turn their amp up much more than it should be due to improper eq a muddy sound caused by coupling or the amp sitting so low on the floor that all the sound is blowing past their legs.
Even if you ve got the mic crammed right up against the grill of the.
I want to raise it off the floor without losing the bottom end because i have used my ampeg rig exclusively for 20 years and i am used to having that stage sound from the top speakers near ear level.
I recently down sized my amp from a classic svt setup 8 10 with a head to a combo amp.
I can hear it easier.
It would make more of a difference on or off the ground.
Especially to the bottom end and low mids and especially if you re tracking layers of guitars.
Getting your amp off the floor not only reduces the mud but moves the amp closer to ear level making it easier for you to hear yourself.
Unless the stage is at least 4 or 5 feet high your amp on the floor is still going to just hit the people near the front.
I have one of the angled amp stands that you can get at guitar center for around 49 00 and my amp sounds better to me on the stand.
I can set my dart stereo amp on the floor on the wave kinetics a10 u8 footers and it sounds the same as on my box furniture amp stand with those same footers.
I ve never been successful putting castors on an amp.
It shouldn t make much of a difference on or off your carpet mat.
Amps tend to be bassier on the ground due to the cab specs.
Most stages i m on are 2 or 3 feet or less so that amp flat on the floor is hitting the crowd about waist high or lower which does nothing for the people a little ways back.