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Nothing beats a cranked tube high gain amp, because a)when close to full output tubes produce natural harmonics and overtones which give the tone "life" and b)the speakers also have a distorting threshold; if you drive them hard you will get a better sound. But realistically speaking, cranking any tube amp is not a good idea unless you're gigging or at a jam studio. Or don't live in an apartment, heh.
And another thing, if you want metal, it has to be a humbucker equipped guitar. Single coils just can't produce the type of sound you want to get out of them.
1. There's this fallacy that tube amp output sits above the solid state tone nirvana- good sounding tone should transcend any circuitry limitations. a good tone is a good tone; tube-propelled or otherwise. there are exceptional solid state units out there to out-tone (Peavey's XXL & Sound Drive's SG-612R, among others...) the tubes in terms of drive.
yes, drivers (speakers to the rest of us) do have an inherent displacement tolerance, however, driving them harder would not neccessarily lead to a better outcome. it depends on the overall performance of the driver, more of what a certain manufacturer has packaged for you.
2. Would you let 'i'm living in an HDB apartment' limitation prevent you from getting a good tone?
3. The humbucker is a preferred pickup type for high drive settings. the frequency cancellation of this pickup type means you get less top-end prick for that bottom end chug. if you love single coils & would wish it'd be on par with the humbucker in terms of 'metal' type distortion, there are devices out there that would boost the single coil for a wider tonal application, one being:
