I am using a single 12 cabinet with a Vintage 30. A big part of the bright sound is more than likely the speaker and cab. The best cabinet I have heard it played through was a 2-12 loaded with either greenbacks or scumbacks. The Vintage 30 IMO, is a bit of a shrill speaker to start with.
It was tweaked at 3/4 to full volume, much to the dismay of my pooch and my soon to be ex-wife.
The thing that was really annoying me, was the fact that the treble pot was almost un-usable. When turned up past 2 or 3, it would not only boost the treble, but it was cancelling out the bass and inducing a loud hiss.
I checked it out on the tonestack program that I downloaded not too long ago and it confirmed that with the values I had, the gain of the bass frequencies was lowered quite a bit when the treble was turned up. After I changed the pot values the treble became much more "usable". You could turn up the treble and not lose so much of the bass. It also lowered the "hiss". This amp has less gain than the first build and the volume knob is much more user friendly. It starts breaking up at a lower level so you don't have to crank it as loud to get the overdriven tones, at least that is the way it worked with the guitars and cab we were using.
I think that the truth is, there are so many variables that go into getting a specific desired sound, that the circuit almost has to tailored to each individuals guitar, pick-ups, speaker cabinet, desired tone AND playing style. I have watched one person plug a guitar into it and just make the thing wail, then someone with a different playing style can pick up the same guitar and not be able to get near the sound that the last player could achieve with the exact same set -up. Not to say that one player is less talented, just that the picking and playing styles vary.
These amps seem to favor precise players who play with feeling. They also tell on the ones who use distortion to hide sloppy playing.
A bad player will not like your shinny new Trainwreck.
