Guitar Tricks Insider June/July Edition | Page 65

GEAR REVIEW FEATURES Built like a tank, the Dual Dark 50 is a 46-pound beast capable of producing tones equally as heavy. It’s outfitted with EL34 tubes and can run at half power (25 watts) while maintaining plenty of valve distortion at lower volume levels – great for those occasions when you don’t want to punish your audience’s eardrums! Channel A is a new design featuring a three-band EQ (treble, middle, and bass) that sounds bright and harmonically more complex, while Channel B is a bit darker and basic offering an ultra-cool, midrange sculpting Shape knob, which I totally dig. Although both channels are equally impressive and purposeful, B has more hi-gain modeled after the Dark Terror series. Each channel has a unique tonal flavor. The amp is more versatile than its metal inclinations, which is apparent when experimenting with the Volume and Gain balance for both, revealing a wide range of clean to heavily distorted tones. JUNE/JULY One of the coolest features is the attenuator knob, which can push the amp to its limits while simultaneously reducing volume down to a whisper without compromising tone. The attenuator sounded best with a clean tone or lesser amounts of overdrive. Conversely, too much attenuator combined with super hi-gain resulted in a squashed tone that might sound impressive while practicing in your bedroom, but would get lost in the mix with a live band. The back of the unit has three speaker outputs (two 8 and one 16 ohm), footswitch inputs for channel selection and attenuator (footswitches sold separately), and an effects loop to colorize your sound. The heavy-duty casing with the control panel inset protects the knobs and switches. Players familiar with Orange’s line will recognize the unique, hieroglyphic style icons DIGITAL EDITION 65