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Its also really easy (for a Mesa) to dial in. The clean channel gets 95% of the way to classic Fender, and the other 3 voices can cover pretty much anything short of Vox tones. I split my playing pretty evenly between the Mesa and Princeton, but i I had to pick a favorite, i'd probably say the Mesa.
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Still in the honeymoon phase but i'd say its the best sounding Fender amp i've ever owned. 1978 Fender Princeton - New kid on the block, but it can hang with the Twin tone wise, and at a civilized volume. My only slight to this amp is that its a tad heavy for quick grab and go and my two favorite voicings are on the same channel 4 unique sounding voices and switchable from 5 to 50 watts. 2008 Mesa Boogie 5:50 - This amp made me rethink my dislike of Mesa's. If i'd taken it in, had it overhauled and black faced it would have sounded fine, but still been too loud so I moved on. Sounded good, but it was louder than I wanted for my primarily home use these days, and couldn't hold a candle to the Twin. 1977 Fender Vibrolux - Only had this 4 or 5 months. Weight + the fact that it sounded best cranked led to passing this one on.
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VOX AC30CC2 TOO BRIGHT HOW TO
Great trem, awesome tone (once you learned how to dial it in) and unique reverb. Sounds good cranked, and really good with a lapsteel and some delay Fender Champion 600 - My little practice amp. When the drummer asks you to turn down, its too loud. For tone, reverb and trem, I benchmark all other Fender amps against this one. 1969 Fender Twin Reverb - Again, this amp sounded godly. 40 watts, tremolo, reverb and 1 tone knob. It was nice to be able to switch from guitar to bass and only have to carry one amp 1971 Fender Bassman 10 - Great amp, but I found the 4X10 a bit tough to move around. If a half stack were still practical for my situation i'd still have this amp. My main amp for over 10 years and oddly enough, no matter how many hot, humid, damp places I played, I never had to replace a single tube. 1987 Marshall JCM 800 - This amp sounded godly. 80's Fender Twin - Red knob version, but with red tolex and black knobs.
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Sounded kinda bad, but had a great built in phaser that I wish I still had I tend to keep amps for a really long time, and had most of these a minimum 5 + years. Here's everything tube and what I thought of them. I have always fancied one of the Marshall 1974x I think it is called. My favourite would be a toss up between the handwired Vox or the Backstar. Used to blow fuses and valves like they were running out of fashion Like a slightly crisper Backstar in a smaller packageįender Evil Twin. Could be a little muddy, but possibly due to the volumes I had to play it at Vox AC30 c2 (greenbacks) - Again, really good sounding amp. I just had the head and cab version which was a bit big Vox AC30 cc2 (Blues) - Lovely crisp bright amp, could be thin for rock musicīlackstar Artisan 30 - Brilliant. Marshall JCM2000 Tsl - OK, bit thin sounding.Ĭheap Marshall something or other - sounded like an angry waspĮngager Tweaker 88 - Great sound for rock, very versatile without doing any sounds really really well. I was going through my list of amps that I have owned, and trying to think about what I liked and didn't about them.