Free Program Ada Mp-1 Preamp Manual

  1. Ada Mp 1 Pedal

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What can I say about this preamp that hasn't been said already throughout various rock records during the 80's and early 90's? One of the most famous bands to use this was Skid Row. They used it pretty much through out their first two albums. Basically anyone during that time who was recording with Michael Wagener was going to use this unit.

Bands such as Extreme and the guitar player from that band Nuno Bettencourt used this extensively for the Pornograffitti album and the tour that followed. Since the early 90's many hard rock players and bedroom rock players have bought into this unit. It has a great 80's tone and being able to switch via midi makes it something useful for live gigging operation. Another artist who was famous for playing this unit was Paul Gilbert.

He is more know for his skills and not tone as much used this and in my opinion had the best tone during this point in his career. One of the down falls of this unit was how noisy it was. There is website that offers modifications to it that make it more usable and less noisy. There is a host of possible mods that you could perform to this preamp. UTILIZATION The unit is pretty easy to figure out. It has the same function that a normal tube amp has but it is all digitally control. It does have tubes in it which made it sound like a real amp.

It also came with a footswitch back in the day. These are harder to find now a days. SOUNDS The sound from this unit is Marshall like in the gain structure and feel.

It has a very high midrange 80's tone that make it sort of a one trick pony. It does have a good clean channel in it but the thing lives in the high gain territory. It really scream when coupled with a Super Strat guitar. It was like the two were made for each other. It will sound good with a Les Paul as well, but something about the voicing just wants a Charvel plugged into it. OVERALL OPINION This is a fun preamp that can give you a great sounding Marshall tone great for hard rock and metal. You can run this in the effects loop of a JCM 800 or another effects loop of a Marshall style guitar amp and you will get a great hair metal rock tone.

You can get these used on ebay all day long. They are usually priced around the $250 mark. So go for more and some for less but that is nice medium for the going rate. I would recommend this preamp to anyone wanting a nice 80's hard rock tone. You might want to get the thing modded for less noise and a cleaner clean channel. The ADA MP1 was one of the first heavily versatile preamps to ever be released. It was featured on many albums and used by a wide range of famous guitarists such as Paul Gilbert and Nuno Bettencourt.

Housed in a 1U chassis, the preamp has quite a few features, including full MIDI integration. It runs on two 12AX7 preamp tubes and has three main voicings - Solid State, Clean and Distortion. UTILIZATION The unit is nicely laid out, but one of the main issues with it is that the numbers tend to jump too much.

The front and rear input jacks also sound different, although there is a mod to fix this. The LCD is easy to read, and scrolling through the menu is no problem at all. When MIDI'd up, everything works flawlessly, and the units have proven to be fairly reliable throughout the years. Some people have issues with the buttons, LCDs leaking or LEDs burning out, but quite a few have survived these past few decades. There is also an extremely helpful forum dedicated to these specific units.

SOUNDS Sound wise, the device emulates the typical hotrodded Marshall sound found so prominently throughout the 80s. Stock, the unit sounds extremely midrange heavy. There is a decent amount of gain on tap, but it's not a ton. Boosting it helps keep it nice and tight, but it then has a problem with getting too thin. Even paired with a good poweramp, I was never able to get a fully satisfying tone out of this device. It was either too boxy, too thin or just wasn't doing it for me. The tube clean is pretty good, and the SS clean actually sounds very close to the JC120, which I enjoyed.

OVERALL OPINION Some people seem to like this preamp, but I was never able to fully jive with it. They used to be real cheap on the used market, but the prices have gone up a bit. I thought my JCM800 could do a much better gain tone than this ever could, and I'd take that over the MP1 despite the MP1 being a lot more versatile. I have it on loan. It must be at least 20 years old, 2 tubes (I don't know how you can fit a third one in there, there's no room left!), midi and all that. I tested it out of curiosity, it's the witness of an entire era!

There's a loop that you can program with the sound itself, which is very good, since it spares you from having to buy a second MIDI device. The headphones output is rated at 600 ohms and more, I don't know what kind of problem they had with their ears back then, but it must have been really bad! There's and acdc9v output next to the midi connection, which is very practical to power the pedalboard without the need to trouble yourself with anything else. I didn't test it though (I don't see how one single plug can deliver ac and dc at the same time and, unfortunately, I don't have the manual).

Edit: this plug is an input. You connect there the output of a 9v adapter, which then supplies power to a pedalboard that supports phantom power with a 7-pin midi connection, shucks! But you can make one yourself that goes out from the ada as a 7-pin, carrying phantom power, and then goes into the pedalboard with 5 pins plus a dc9v plug. On the other hand, there's no input control, it's pretty bad, especially for that time (my dod and ibanez from the '90s have one).

It worked straight off with my ultra-simple yamaha midi pedalboard , a very good point since I don't understand anything about that! Important edit: This unit was defect. It had 2 badly soldered resistances, so I could rewrite the Sound section. UTILIZATION No knobs to turn, except for the master volume. It has lots of buttons hidden under a thick layer of blue plastic.It's awful, but still works without a hitch. No need for a user manual, the interface is pretty well though-out, it's rather logical, there's no comparison with the infidels at rocktron grr!), so you just press and you know what's going on.

There seem to be to distortion stages (are both tubes?) and an equalizer, plus an analog chorus. Basic, but useful.

The first stage is very biting, almost harsh, while the second one is rounder and more punchy. It generates quite some noise, obviously, so you will need to choose very clean tubes (usually incompatible with a good gain). I think the FX loop is foreseen for a noise gate (considering that a midi multi-effects can handle delays, reverbs and company).

But nothing stops you from it. This device would've been truly awesome with two additional FX loops, there was enough room and they could've easily asked for a stratospheric price. SOUNDS I was seduced by something I never expected: The chorus, which is truly splendid. As for the rest, it's OK, the clean sounds are warm and the clarity of the device is flagrant, good and rich analog sound. The overdrives aren't bad at all, I think you can achieve almost anything except for a pronounced compression combined with a bit of gain (I'm thinking screamin blues, ts7).

But it sounds fine, very subtle and dynamic. The EQ apparently doesn't allow you to choose the mids frequency, a real pity. Besides, I think it's passive, because it's not too precise nor drastic. The distortions are fine, with more punch than you'd think, and also quite some background noise. Heavy rhythm guitars sound awesome.

The reaction of the unit to your playing is especially stunning, it's quick and straightforward. For solos, the sustain is sublime, just like the warmth, and the sound remains precise, but you have to try your hardest. Lots of mids, definitely not for numetal (all the better!). I use a with emg hz, that can really delver quite some output level.

OVERALL OPINION I love the pristine, dynamic, warm sound, the programmable loop, the built-in phantom power for the midi pedalboard, and the device's relative simplicity. With my favorite compressor on top (only for its class, no boost), it's awesome, just the way I like it. I can't really say much about residual noise with distortion, since my electroharmonix tubes have a good gain level and grit, but they might be a bit noisy. Regarding the 3-tube modification, I don't see how that can be possible, given the space inside. Surely the gain would increase, but with the passive EQ it won't get too far in the Mesa Recto (and company) direction. Given the price of some good metal pedals, I don't think it's worth it to go for the ada and risk it bursting!

I'm happy I got to try this unit out, which sparked my curiosity, so here's an update two days later: I went to the adadepot site to get better acquainted with the innards of the machine. The 3-tube mod is simple, you just have to change the miniprint, very well-spotted.

But the noise also increases, so you have to do the noise mods, which are more delicate since you have to meddle with the big print and the power supply. I don't think it's worth it. The only mod that caught my interest is the rectifier/5150 mode, because it's very simple (you only need to change some resistances/capacitors on the miniprint), extremely cheap and it's reversible. The sound becomes more mesa, smoother, and the background noise is gone. Interesting!but useless, in my opinion, in light of today's comparison: line6 versus ada. It's a spider4 30w with an speaker.

I plugged the ada directly into the aux in, so it's just the power amp and speaker. And I plugged the spider directly into the guitar input. The results are clear, the ada sounds pretty muddled and noisy.

It's good for blues, where it sounds as good as the spider. The cleans, and especially the big distortions are clearly better in terms of edge, precision, speed. And there is simply no noise. It's amazing for some killer rhythm guitars, sorry for the purely analog clan! Add to that the decent built-in effects, the remote-controlled tap tempo, the ultra-fast preset change and I don't really see a reason to bother yourself with the ada. I'll do the same with 150W just to see what happens. I'll update my review if there are any changes.

Manual

The ADA MP1 is programmable preamp in 1U rack format that features 3 channels. Originally it has 2 tubes dedicated to the clean tube and distortion channels. Personally, I had it modified into a 3TM (adding a third tube) by ordering a kit for about $200 from adadepot. That's all you need if you aren't too clumsy with the soldering iron! It is very comprehensive in terms of connections: 2 outputs, one line output, one headphones output, one mono FX loop. It obviously has MIDI connections (In, OUT and THRU).

The only drawback is that it doesn't have any inputs on the rear panel. What are people who have very crowded racks to do? -1 in this regard!!

Fortunately, you can modify it by converting the line output into an input (which is something I plan to do with a kit available at adadepot). UTILIZATION The setup is silly, provided you are used to fiddling with a rack, but, yet again, it's light years from the complexity of a lexicon and company. The manual gives clear and precise instructions, especially related to MIDI mapping, which may seem a bit arcane, but after that it does everything by itself! Regarding sound editing, if you buy this preamp (secondhand, unfortunately!!) it's because you like the 'vintage' type, good old '80s metal, girls, beer.but now I'm getting off topic. So, YES, you can easily get a good sound if you don't buy this preamp by chance and you know what you want! SOUNDS Does it suit my style of music?

LOL, by now I think everybody has already understood that I got this preamp for the sounds it delivers: Metallica (from their good days!!), Iron maiden.But with the 3TM you get dangerously close to modern sounds and I sometimes surprise myself doing some Dream Theater or even Symphony X (I'm still getting to know it, though.but it will eventually happen!) My gear: Gibson SG + John Suhr pickups (SSH+ and DSV, a real delight, I used to have a tone zone and an air norton), MXR phase 90, MP1, VHT 2/50/2, 1x12 VHT Fat Bottom, 1x12 Marshall with V30. Everything controlled with a Ground Control + GCX. To have a good sound you need good gear!!

Strictly speaking, the sounds are excellent. The clean sound recalls Metallica in 'And Justice For All.' , but fiddling a bit with the knobs you can get a more twangy sound, too, without having the impression of playing a twin reverb, you have to be reasonable! I don't use much the Tube Clean channel, it's not my thing. Other people might be able to say more about it. Ahhhhhhhhhhhhh, the distortion.it's truly wonderful!!

Although too mids-heavy, the EQ (which is very effective) allows you to get a very broad sound palette. It's stunning! The 3TM plays a big role in that, sounds are more aggressive, with more harmonics, in short, a real joy!! OVERALL OPINION 3 years of MP1, and I haven't had enough. You could maybe criticize its somewhat limited clean channel in terms of sounds, but you have the triaxis for that, which is hardly within the same price point.Because there's the small detail that this preamp costs ONLY $450. The first time I used it, I plugged it to the loop of an ENGL Savage and I can still remember my friend's face when he saw that the MP1 (not yet modified) could eclipse the Savage preamp.

I've had the opportunity to test different preamps: Peavey Rockmaster, Rocktron Pirnha, there's simply no comparison — the MP1 is better. Excellent value for money, killer sound, and other than the input on the rear there's mot much to complain about. To summarize: It's a 19' rack preamp. A tube preamp with 128 storable presets. Midi classic preamp with 3 channels. UTILIZATION It's pretty comfortable to use because it's very minimalist.

In other words, you choose a channel, clean solid-state, clean tubes or distortion, you adjust the settings, and you record. Up to that point no issues. Getting a good sound.That's another question. It took me two hours to find my distortion, but I can say that it's just the way I want it. I didn't have any problems finding my clean sound, because I'm less demanding in that sense. All in all, this preamp sounds always good, it's not a crappy preamp. The manual is clear.

SOUNDS It's time to delve into the details. This preamp is old, so the sound is a bit old-fashioned. Especially the distortion, it's not suited to play numetal, but rather hard 'n' heavy or thrash from the '80s and even '90s. Its hard-rock sound suits me very well (Skid Row used this preamp). The sound of the ADA is very straightforward, proper and precise when it comes to distortion. It's pretty British in spirit but with more gain. The solid-state clean is wicked, very jc-120-like, even though at first I had a hard time achieving anything.

The tubes clean is like a clean marshall (think jcm 900), it distorts very quickly, which isn't really my thing. Edit: I applied the 3.666 mod and it changed the sound of my ada completely.

It now sounds more like a mesa boogie rectifier preamp, but neater, the grit is very similar and to be honest, I think my setup is amazing. If you are hesitating about doing modifications, don't!

OVERALL OPINION I haven't used it too long, but I already had some rehearsals with it and I played my first gig with it last Tuesday. What I like the most is the distortion, which is very '80s, and the clean sound suits me perfectly, too. I don't know what I like the least, but I analyzed several preamps to choose the one that suited me better. I bought it for $250 on ebay + $45 shipping + $50 customs + $20 for the bank transfer. It is in very good shape.

It cost me $365 in total, which is acceptable. I would definitely buy it again.

It's great for hard, heavy, thrash metal like in the old days. It sounds awesome with other styles, too, but I like to play hard! It's definitely pro gear.

Tube preamp (2x12AX7) canux three (solid state clean, clean tube and tube distortion), 4-band EQ gain settings + 2 + a bonus chorus (depth and rate). For the rest two outputs, a headphone jack, a volume generally taken midday. UTILIZATION Frankly for a c its simple, not as much as an amp head, but only on my voodu. SOUNDS The clean offers many possibilities with its two channels. I do not really tested but the results are good, with a chorus that goes by itself.

Remains to be seen what happens with a stratum. Note the channel tube that acts as crunch when you push the gain. Distal side, woof it hard. Frankly at Pm we did not go by halves: all gains to 10, EQ dug. A Vigier Marilyn in EMG 81, as on my Lag equipped tone zone, it sends a very serious, the slap, the sound is very powerful and something I enjoy, the palm mute remain crisp and sharp, well compressed as should the class.

OVERALL OPINION Thank you to Pm for its MP-1, frankly I tried again and it really kills his mother. I think I found a preamp to the sound that suited me, and super fast to program. One downside: the equalization is effective, but pales next to that of GP3, or my, while sounding more light, however. However no problem blowing to report. Good going, considering the price of the machine, these few flaws are soon forgotten. 9.5/10 for real metalheads, for others this preamp has less interest. Addition from 27/04: I ran the MP-1 much of the weekend, and have particularly compared to: Result: a saturation of the voodu sharper but more 'digital' and less extensive.

The ADA has a large distortion, but sounds very medium with my guitar (the fault of the Tone Zone). Once I put an EQ or changed the tone zone, the sound should be even better. Last, this one negative: Can not set the volume on this machine.

If you want a saturation of crazy, we push everything to the bottom, if you want to enter a nod to a clear later, we are left with significant differences in volume. Therefore correct in the end rather 9 / 10 as 9.5 given the price. See more notice o) UTILIZATION Very easy to ACCS. There are not hundreds of paramtres and quickly found the sound that is sought.

There is a button with a paramtre Arrows + - to change the parameter. We add a button to record and tour is played. It's simple and effective SOUNDS Personally, I rather play the blues rock and funk. The sound is top. But the MP1 can do lots of other things.

He has a great sound for all that is metal. A big patatte and his own. It's not the mesa boogie but I think it's better than the marshall. I liken a Soldano (a bit less). There are three channels. Clear with a transistor, a light crunch and distortion lamp.

Personally, I use the transistor channel for clean sounds, trs crystal (with a little delay or reverb is little nickel wing). For lgrement crunchy sounds, the first channel lamp is very well and pushing a little gain was a super fast rock'n'roll's trs. With my Les Paul, it was soon in a book that navigates between ZZ Top and AC / DC. I use the second channel trs little saturated for rhythm. It's really fat and goes for pieces that have couil. We play from time to time and will Antisocial trs well. For lead sounds, please choose from the two channel lamp, turn up the rolls and berthe o) Intgr chorus is not bad, it is still necessary to use it: o) OVERALL OPINION I have 7 years and it is indestructible.

It came down to a table at a concert before. The rack morfler pramp but did not budge. Not even a lamp pter I love this preamp and if he let me go I do not know what I will do: o ( We do find more and I do not know of that could suit me replaceable (by Triax, but the must j'conomise). If you find one of OCCAZ, Do not hesitate.

Ada Mp 1 Pedal

I add a Derrire Quadraverb and frankly, I rack my n'changerai for anything. Prampli lamps (two 12AX7) 19 '1U - 3 channels (solid state, tube tube clean and distortion) - Fx-loop - Headphone - MIDI IN, THROUGH and OUT - Rglages: OD1, OD2, master gain, bass, mid, treble, presence - Chorus (rate and depth) UTILIZATION I played before on a / Boogie and operation is identical. The SETTING THE trs's are simple, you select The argument change (eg prsence) and press either the Arrows up to increase or on the fl che down to reduce Easy! SOUNDS My guitar is an Ibanez rotten with two EMG (81, 85), I play rock / metal. For the first time in my life, I GROSSON the Discoveries.

EMG + ADA MP1, here is the recipe for happiness! As for clean sounds, I use the channel Solid State, the sound is more crystalline. For crunch, nothing like the Clean Tube with a lot of gain, and we get the brunt of crunch. Finally, the distortion is Tube Disto with Master Gain block and balance it! In addition, you can play with the chorus to color and clean distos. OVERALL OPINION Attention, I'm going to har by the Community Audiofanzine: MP1 exploded on the Triaxis!

DSOL the ptits, but it's not just Mesa / Boogie in life The sound of the ADA MP1 is simply monstrous, like a potato I had ever heard! The only problem is the buzz, it blows a little too I got. I think a acqurir Hush shortly to address this problem. This pramp is exceptional for two reasons: first, its price, then the original kernel, which I do not have the same sound all the fans of Mesa. I had a good time on my Triaxis, now I pramp Discoveries THE.

Prampli lamps (2 x 12AX7) Connection between 6.35 Jack mono, Stereo output in 4 db 2 overdrive, EQ + medium severe acute prsence loop insert a chorus effect UTILIZATION Simple configuration the sounds of the factory pousss extreme as always, but when looking around, there are fast the manual is fairly brief, but sufficient SOUNDS Perfect for rock style Toto. Use with Korg A2 Saturated and crunch sounds, its clear warm light trs enjoyable I prfre sounds saturated own OVERALL OPINION I use it for 10 years one default rel: it blows a lot. I added a Rocktron Husk to clean Another good choice I think:, cleaner.

So you used it w/o a tube/amp I assume.Correct; it was when I was in my rack phase and ran it direct through my signal chain in stereo either into: MT2X 4-Track tape Audiomedia III Digi 001 Digi 002R Live - Mackie 1202 mixer into stereo PA. Made recording cranked amp sounds possible without getting evicted, and gigging was super easy. I then got into older Fender amps and am happy with those now for my tone + pedals. These people also do mods and almost thought about it when mine died and didn't want to spend the $$ Edit - just clicked on the link; they've stopped doing mods. ADA was an interesting company, my music store in the 80's was a dealer, I'm still using an MC-1 midi patch selector pedal to control the midi effects on my guitar rig. I sold quite a few of the the ADA midi preamps, a very popular combination was the MP-1, Crown power amp and Marshall 4x12 cab.

Personally I ALWAYS preferred the sound of a real tube amp but the MP-1 offered programmable settings you could switch between in a heartbeat and that was popular with musicians who were gigging a lot and need versatility. My personal guitar rig back then was constantly changing but I usually worked with two guitar amps and a pan pedal so I could send my guitar to either amp in varying quantity, one amp set clean and one set for crunch, both Fender's I modded. For me the MP-1 was missing one trait I value highly in a tube amp, the ability to back down my guitar and have the sound clean up. The MP-1 sort of did this because it had real tubes in it but it still had more blur than I liked, even with the guitar backed down to almost off.

I never got the MP-1 to sound right without playing it through a cabinet. I remember a metal band that came to record in our store-studio, the MP-1 driving a bridged Crown 300 into a Marshall 4x12, turned up REAL LOUD made some amazing recordings. I was glad I got to sit in the control room, it was WAY to freaking loud out in the studio, and it was a 3500 sq ft room with 18 foot ceilings. We recorded it with an SM-57 and an RE-20 to a Fostex 16 track, that recording got the guitar player into a major touring act that was signed to a real record deal (which went nowhere lol).

Mp-1

I'm glad to see people still using and liking the ADA. Wish I could find one of their old flanger pedals in cherry condition, now that was the sound! Good music to all! If you were a 'serious' shredder in the late-80s, you needed to own this. It retailed for around $700 back then, so probably its today price was around twice that. Not an inexpensive piece of gear. It was unique in its time that there weren't any other programmable preamps, but it also did have a great sound.

It was very sharp and hot sounding, and the top was glassier than a distortion pedal. It did sound like a real amp.

It was also pretty noisy. So a typical rack also had another space for a hush noise gate. The reason the programmable preamp was important was because digitech started the multi-fx revolution and everyone needed a preamp that could switch by midi to use with their FX processor. In this time period, Rocktron also had a Pro-GAP preamp which was an analog solid state version of the same thing which i also owned brieftly. The rocktron had more versatile EQ, but in general it didnt catch on as much.

Later entries in this vein were the JMP-1 and the rocktron Piranha (which I also owned which is great piece imo). Shreddy music was killed by grunge in the early 90s, so everyone dumped their racks and went to more traditional head/cab or combo.

(Or just kept their racks in their basement.) In a way, the MP-1 was ahead of its time, it wasn't until late 90s that multiFX processors returned, although rack mount midi preamps were few and far between. Not until the past 5-7 years, intricate shreddy music was viewed as an abberation. Its nice to see younger players with access to the internet revive these older styles. I just found one on CL for $125 with the footswitch and manual. OG with the switch on top. SOUNDS CRAZY!!!! Def nails the hot rodded Marshall sound.

We have a Soldano Super Lead Slave 105 Power Amp at the studio that I plugged it into to try it out. I have an SLO clone that I built and have owned about 6 JMP/800 era marshalls, some that were tweaked and hotrodded. This can get you there with a few edits, but the tonestack gives it it's own voice.

And much cheaper than a JMP with a Friedman mod. Glad I saw this thread a week ago. My CL curiosity paid off. Can't wait to try it on a metal band!!!