It is important to understand how the GM36, and we assume the GM40 as they are the same family, have their input circuitry set up in order to get the best of any gain (boost/overdrive/distortion) pedal. The design of that input buffer stage makes them respond to input signals in a more sensitive way than "normal" amps.
There is a clipping overdrive/distortion mechanism built into the input buffer stage and it is significant in its effect on tone. You can't turn it off, there is absolutely no need to do so. It is present in every setup you can dial into the amp and is only altered by the channel selection which increases its effect when either the Lead or Ultra channel is turned on. People bleat at the fact that they can't remove it but you only need to understand it and have the confidence to work it as it should be worked then you may find your amp opens up to you even more. It never interferes with your ability to get any tone the amp can produce and it does the job of buffering the guitar perfectly as well. The buffer is a perfectly clean single opamp stage which gives the guitar a rock solid input impedance and amplifies the input signal by just over 3x to match the point where the valve stages can be heavily overdriven to help enable them to give the higher gain sounds most users want. At low levels it has absolutely NO effect on the signal at all. No crap about "tonesuck" please, it simply doesn't exist in this context.
The mechanism is an assymetric clipping circuit around that opamp, (assymetric = different on +ve and -ve sides of the signal which is the more musical type of distortion). It comprises of four 3V9 zener diodes in the opamp's feedback loop, 3 in one direction with the fourth in reverse. This means the diodes will turn on and clip at about 3x0.6V + 3.9V = 5.7V in one direction and 3x3.9V + 0.6V = 12.3V in the other. It responds only to one thing, the level of your input signal from either the guitar or whichever pedal is the last in line before it. This puts the onus on you to control that signal level to the point where you get the tone you are looking for and you must do that with the volume control of your guitar or the output level control of the last pedal. It's a real adult's distortion mechanism right under your finger and I like to look on it as a free boost/overdrive/distortion pedal built into the amp!
At low levels of guitar/pedal signal it is completely transparent and, to all intents and purposes, is out of circuit. You can increase the Gain/Volume of the amp to compensate, there is plenty of gain to spare after it. That way you are getting only the effect of the amp's valve stages in terms of distortion.
If you increase the input level to a certain point the clipping on one side of the signal kicks in and you get sweetened classic valve overdrive type sounds. At this level clipping is very gradual as there are the 4 diodes creating it which smooths out the rounding off of the signal.
At a slightly higher level the mechanism clips that lower side more but you then also get the other side of the signal beginning to be clipped too.
At your highest signal level both sides are clipping fairly hard so you effectively have a full on distortion pedal before your amp circuitry. Remember, that is before you add any other pedals between guitar and amp.
With the Lead or Ultra channel engaged the input signal is amplified more by this stage with a trimmed frequency response which drives this mechanism harder by a factor of about 2x so distortion becomes more extreme.
Try this experiment. Plug your guitar into the amp directly with no pedals. Turn the volume down very low on the guitar, maybe even as far as 1 or 2, and set up the amp on the Clean channel with whatever volume you like. The input stage is now totally clean and tone is coming only from the later valve stages. Play with the Gain, (remember that is only the Gain of the valve stages), and set it up for whatever overall level of amp distortion you like as things stand. Once you are familiar with the sounds you can create with that level of signal, keep the amp on Clean, turn the Gain back down to remove valve distortion and turn your guitar up until you detect the input distortion kicking in. Again play with the amp's Gain control to see what tones you can get. I find this input type a good basis for Crunch tones. Finally, still on the Clean channel, turn amp Gain down, the guitar up full and again trim the Gain control. With low amp gain you have only the input stage producing distortion so testing in this way allows you to hear what it is contributing. With the input in its basic three stages of distortion, (there is much more subtlety in real use), you have simply added in a degree of valve stage distortion to trim it. Once I learned to use the amp in this way I found my use of any other distortion pedals really dropped away.
A large amount of complaints of harsh or confused distortion tones in the GMs are caused by too much of a "pedals + input stage + valve stages + output stages" full on approach. You need to concentrate on one of those mechanisms and blend in the others sparingly if at all. With too much from all of them you will just confuse the whole sound and make it very strident and harsh. Of course you may like that but it doesn't sound as though that is often the case from many peoples' comments. Understanding this is the approach you should take in finding your distortion tones. It relies on you getting the level right at the input socket. Too often I find myself unaware of the fact that I am playing full on from my guitar and unsuccessfully trying to dial what I want in on the amp. Once I trim back the input signal it clears up and I can then get the amp settings right. The same thing applies with your pedals and their signal level into the amp I suspect. With active pedals in the mix it definitely needs the output level of the last pedal to be trimmed to control the GM input stage.
I really do find there is too much choice nowadays and it makes us suffer from that modern FOMO phenomenon, (Fear Of Missing Out - as in, I've paid a fortune for this pedal so I have to have it in use all the time.). If we aren't careful it can make us "pedal collectors" in an unhealthy way as it can confuse the Hell out of us when we try to use them to get what we want. I now strictly restrict my own pedal board to only a tuner, a Sliderig compressor used only for slide work, a classic Wah which is only used in a couple of funk numbers and a single overdrive distortion pedal chosen from either a Blackstar HT Dual (current choice) or a Marshall Bluesbreaker or my own corrected Okko Diablo type dual SRPP configuration circuit. With both of the amps I use, GM36 at home or JVM205H for gigging, this gives me every tone I can want and more, and distortion ranges from none to dirtier than I would ever use for my music with no overcluttered effect at all. And limiting the input stage distortion contribution really does help to remove some of that GM36 top end earache.
[EDIT: After looking back at the circuitry I found I was wrong in what I originally wrote about this! My apologies for my poor memory. The increased gain/distortion in the input stage is automatically selected when you bring in the Lead or Ultra channels NOT by kicking in the Boost function as I first said.]
Last edited by bordonbert on Tue Apr 12, 2022 6:42 am; edited 5 times in total