I heard they are clones; how good are they compared to the originals in your opinion? In particular, I want to know the comparisons between the Marshall clones to the original. I've read reviews at Harmony Central and many players prefer the clones over the originals. The said that it's got one of the best tones around. Any ideas on that?
I'm actually in the middle of building a Weber clone of an 18-watt marshall 1974 model. (That's just the model number--not the year they were in production. The 1974 Marshall amp was in production during the late 60s. I have
no idea where Marshall got their model-numbering system, but I can't make heads or tails of it.)
This is the new Marshall reissue of that model.
http://guitars.musiciansfriend.com/product/Marshall-1974X-Handwired-18W-1x12-Combo-Amp?sku=482706
Anyway, after hearing someone else's Weber clone of this amp, I decided to build my own. It killed that much. However, I'm building a head/cab version with a 2x10 cab. (The original Marshall was available in 1x12, 2x10, and 2x12 configurations.)
I'm doing the whole thing from scratch (building my own cabinets and all), and it looks as though with everything, it's going to cost me around $800. That's including some upgrades from the Weber kit, the most expensive of which were the GE NOS tubes.
I'm also replacing the jacks, switches, and pilot lamp because I've heard bad things about them, although my friend used them in his amp and hasn't had any problems in over a year.
I've never played an original Marshall 1974, but I played this handwired reissue (1974x) at a local store. It sounded amazing, but the Weber clone sounded at least as good to me. I couldn't A/B them, so I can't make a direct comparison.
But what I can tell you is that I did not leave the guitar store after playing the 1974x reissue thinking "Damn, that clone isn't doing the job. This is what a
real Marshall sounds like!"
I left that store thinking, "Oh yeah ... I remember how good that clone sounded now, and I can't wait to get mine!"