gibson59neck said:
I love how so many people on this freakin' site are looking for a fight.
Glad you picked up on that and fired back. This site has more of this "beat up the guy we dont know yet" attitude than any other site except Harmony Central.....but if I'm gonna get raked, I'd rather get it at HC than here. This is the one thing that sux most of all about this forum. On the bright side, you will notice after a while that it's always the same 5 or 10 people who do that. There is a really cool new forum technology available.....it's called "Ignore List." Works great, less filling.
I've been thru 8 amps in the last 2 years, and I've played at least a dozen different brands of heads and combos and cabs in the stores. I admit I will never play metal, but for classic rock and blues I can say without any reservation that the best "training" amp I've ever had for introducing myself to tube amps and speakers is a Traynor. I loved it the moment I played it, and it took me a year of toying with Mesa and Fender and Vox and THD and Budda and Rivera etc.etc.etc. to realize that the Traynor was a great basic beginning tube amp. Built like a tank, with a basic raw punchy gritty tube sound that helped me figure out why tube amps are soooo cooooL! If I had not found great deals on a Mesa and a Twin, I would probably be buying that YCS100 right now. The Vox AC30 is also very tempting.
But if I had more money to burn, I'd definitely be shopping the Riveras, the THD's, the Badcats, the Frizell, the Budda, Bogner, Randall, etc.... I think so far my favorite is the THD Bivalve.
Have fun shopping and comparing before you commit your money. And you can always sell it on eBay if you find something you like better. Being the seller gives you an advantage. I got back 80% or more what I paid by selling on eBay a year later. But I bought my Mesa and my Twin locally from a soundman I've known for a long time. Include trips to see live local acts, and pay attention to what amps they use and ask them between sets if the amps and cabs are modified in any way. If you like what you hear, remember what it is and go test drive it later at a store. Research the web for a few days, find out what rig was used to make your favorite guitarist sounds, then go shop that gear.
And dont let the booger chippers scare you off......
