
ibanezrocks
New member
Diogo I believe that epiphone amp is solidstate, it says evalve tube tone circuitry, which either means that it emulates tubes, or it might have a tube in the preamp.
KKM1 said:For a KICK ASS tube recording amp with NO PEDALS you need to try out the Gibson Goldtone Ga-5 Les Paul Jr amp. One knob (volume) and 5 watts of the most beautiful distortion youll ever hear. Its hand wired and looks cool as hell too.
http://gibson.com/Products/Amplifiers/Gibson Amplifiers/GA5 Les Paul Junior/
Outlaws said:But for the amp, a tube in the preamp doesn't make it a tube amp anyway you cut it. I will sound better no doubt than a all solid state amp, but volume wise it won't affect a thing. All of that is in the preamp circuit where the signal is being taken from instrument level to line level...the same level a CD player is at. A power amp or the power section (or the powertubes) is where the output volume is concerned.
Since you need to gig, for a solidstate I would stick to 60-100 watts. For tube, no less than 22-30 if you need a clean sound live, becuase it will be loud, but it will break up into distortion quicker the less watts there are.
hiwatt357 said:Acutally, the Vox VR30 (as well as the VR15 and all of the Vox Valvetronix stuff), the tube is in the power amp section. There's plenty of info out on the web on the way these Valve Reactor amps work.
I just got a VR30 a couple of weeks ago, and I'm quite impressed. You might not be able to play a stadum with it, but I'd be willing to bet that in most clubs, you could get away with it with no issues.
Here's a thread on the Vox VR series from The Fender Forum.
Outlaws said:This thread is way old but you are wrong. Yes there is a 12ax7 for the 'power section', but it is not the same thing as other tube amps.