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One has to take the opinions shared in youtube channels of guitar stores with a grain of salt. Fender dealership is extremely hard to get and Fender can cut the dealership anytime. I know this from a highly respected local store here that's been trying to carry Fender products for years.
They are not gonna say 1000 dollar Fender amp sounds exactly the same as the 3000 dollar one after 130 dollar speaker change on a popular channel and risk pissing off Fender.
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09-05-2020 12:29 PM
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Originally Posted by Tal_175
I think you definitely pay a Fender fee.... there's a few great amps for that price range. If I was looking for a $2k-ish handwired 15-watt(wish) Fender BF style amp, I would look into Milkman, Cornell, Morgan etc.
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Originally Posted by christianm77
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BTW I’m pleased to report the Nando’s was exceptionally cheeky, although I had to have a snooze afterwards to recover.
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Originally Posted by christianm77
Easy for you to say!
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Duplicate.
Last edited by Doug B; 09-05-2020 at 07:02 PM.
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Originally Posted by christianm77
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Originally Posted by wzpgsr
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Originally Posted by christianm77
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Originally Posted by Tal_175
BTW there is an older post about turning a Fender Ramparte into the perfect jazz amp.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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The answer is obvious. there only ONE tube amp that will properly satisfy the OP's needs. And it's for sale on this very forum, right here:
Princeton Reverb clone with a twist - "this amp really boogies!"
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Originally Posted by Cunamara
The OP asked weight of the PRRI. It is 34 lbs, answered the Google.
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Originally Posted by wzpgsr
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Originally Posted by wzpgsr
Some would say that the originals sound richer, more complex etc, and I suppose that's either subjective or cork sniffing. All I can say definitely is that I won't be letting go of my vintage Deluxe Reverb, Vox, Marshall etc any time soon. I do like some of the boutique ones as well; for instance I have a Fat Jimmy (US west coast brand) that has a bit of brown era DNA in the circuit of what is mostly a blackface amp with some other tweaks, and it sounds great for jazz.
I seem to remember reading that a tweed Deluxe was the "house amp" at Rudy Van Gelder's studio, and i guess we all no how definitive those guitar tones are! But I wouldn't be trying to gig with one, they just don't stay clean at band volumes.
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I've made amps with new and old parts. I can't tell the difference between new and old caps and resistors.
I can tell the difference between new and old transformers and speakers. Sometimes, though, I prefer the new speaker.
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I've posted this before, so sorry for the repetition, but it's relevant.
My first amp was a 64 Reverberocket, which I still have and sounds great, even with a replacement speaker and mostly new tubes.
What is surprising though, is that it didn't sound all that different from the Little Jazz, except the LJ was cleaner on chords.
They didn't sound exactly the same, but pretty close. I added reverb in front of each amp with a Boss ME80 and then added a little more from the amp. I adjusted EQ to get my sound. I didn't leave them each flat (as if I would know how to do that with a single treble cut tone control on the Ampeg).
The Ampeg went into the closet. I started using the LJ even for rehearsals at home.
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Originally Posted by bluejaybill
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Originally Posted by christianm77
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
Then Joe Pass, Herb Ellis, Jim Hall and George Benson started using Polytones and I got one of those (I wonder if Tommy Gumina, the founder of Polytone received death threats from Chiropractors?)
Old Princeton and Deluxe amps were cheap and Twins were still the go to tube amps until a major change happened. The venues started having a house PA system. Now you did not have to lug a Twin and could show up with a Princeton or Deluxe to do the gig. All of a sudden, the prices of old Twins and Supers fell and Princeton and Deluxe prices skyrocketed. Fender responded by re-issuing the Princeton and Deluxe, albeit with PCB board construction and some cheap Asian made components. I have owned the reissues and some originals and can say that they do not sound alike (and I am not saying that the reissues sound bad, simply that they sound different).
Polytone is long gone, but that market is now being handled by Mambo, Henriksen and there are Asian made amps galore that deliver a clean solid state sound. There are boutique tube amp makers that will recreate the classic handwired tube amps at silk stocking trade prices.
We now have computers inside amp cabinets that mimic to some degree tube amp sounds or your favorite solid state amps if you prefer.
If a tube amp is the preference and weight is a deal killer, there are hybrids that are easy on the back.
Old tube amps can be a money pit, so IMO, unless it is a small Fender (Princeton, Deluxe etc.) it may be good money after bad owning a vintage tube amp.
For not very much money, a Blues Junior can be had that will deliver good tube amp tone and reasonable weight. For a bit more money a Princeton reissue or Deluxe reissue can be had. All three of those amps can benefit from mods and upgrades, so the best deal might be to find a used example where a prior owner has spent the dough and you get a great example for a great price.
Like archtop guitars, I think the choices today are bigger than ever before. There are so many considerations. Tone (that is always personal taste), price, reliability and availability.
For resale, repairability, weight and tone (my preference), I would go with a small Fender tube amp. (I have a vintage Princeton in my arsenal).
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Originally Posted by christianm77
Most of them come with "upgrades" but a handwired amp is easy to customize in a reversible way so that's not a big appeal.Last edited by Tal_175; 09-07-2020 at 02:53 PM.
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
I was raised in the Gravesend section of Brooklyn. Played in teen-age rock bands and worked in a music store. Most of the guitar players I saw--rock or jazz--used Ampegs which were widely available. Very few players used Fenders. I was one exception with a blackface Twin I purchased new in May, 1964 for $240.
Tony D.
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Originally Posted by pilotony
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
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Originally Posted by Stringswinger
Even before I'd heard of Clapton, I recall that the 335 shape was popular, with some guys I knew playing the Epiphone Casino. I think it was because of the reduced feedback.
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When I was a boy, there were basically four kind of guitars that were played by the good guitar players in Southern California (where I lived). I am talking about the late-50s through mid-60s, here.
The really good players had (1) Gibsons--pretty even split between the ES-335 and the L-5/ES-175 archtop crowds. (2) The Fender folks--pretty even split between the Jazzmaster and the Telecaster players among the serious guitarists. (3) The Rickenbacker crowd. These players were some of the best players in Southern California. (4) All other electric guitars--including Epiphone, D'Angelico, Gretsch, etc.
The common denominator--and this is because it was the West Coast--is that everybody played into either a tweed Fender amp or a blonde or black Tolex covered Fender amp. Pros, Twins, Deluxes mainly. I didn't see an Ampeg until I moved to the East Coast in '67. Then, it was mainly Ampegs plus Twin and Super Reverbs. The rock guys used Kustom, Marshall, and Vox, but it was chiefly Ampeg and Fender.
Essentially nobody played a Stratocaster...until Hendrix came along...then, BOOM!
A really nice pickup in a cheap guitar
Yesterday, 09:11 PM in Guitar, Amps & Gizmos