D
DJL
Self Banned
quagmire77 said:The Vox Pathfinder is the best dollar for dollar value that you will find.
Is the Vox Pathfinder a "tube" amp, if so, please tell me more about it? Thanks.
quagmire77 said:The Vox Pathfinder is the best dollar for dollar value that you will find.
docrogers said:Roland Cube 15 (has EQ, distortion settings or clean, input for other device and for headphones, aux--about $99) or Cube 20 (has all that + reverb-about $175)
DJL said:Is the Vox Pathfinder a "tube" amp, if so, please tell me more about it? Thanks.
There have been numerous Fender "Princeton" amps over the decades, all of them substantially different in configurations and outputs. The "Princeton Stereo Chorus" is a 2x25.5WRMS=51WRMS solid state amp that has quite a following among clean Jazz players, particularly. It's a snazzy little amp that is more popular than the later DSP version. It's fine at low volumes and the combined stereo 51WRMS is nothing like a monophonic 50WRMS tube amp. There are a lot of features, such as a front-loaded mono/stereo effects loop.DJL said:I think the Princeton is 65 watts and I really want less power.
Yeah, the Pro Junior is interesting. Here's what I've noticed: People who don't really know any better get the Blues Junior. People who are sharper get the Pro Junior.CMEZ said:For a small recording amp bang for the buck, the Fender Pro Junior is great. Seriously.
That's the "Cube 30."docrogers said:Roland Cube 15 (has EQ, distortion settings or clean, input for other device and for headphones, aux--about $99) or Cube 20 (has all that + reverb-about $175)
I just noticed this application note (hey, I'm reading the thread backwards!) and I want to add a point to my Blues Junior comments above.DJL said:He everyone. I want to pickup a few small 10 to 20 watt tube type guitar amps for my small studio.
bongolation said:There have been numerous Fender "Princeton" amps over the decades, all of them substantially different in configurations and outputs. The "Princeton Stereo Chorus" is a 2x25.5WRMS=51WRMS solid state amp that has quite a following among clean Jazz players, particularly. It's a snazzy little amp that is more popular than the later DSP version. It's fine at low volumes and the combined stereo 51WRMS is nothing like a monophonic 50WRMS tube amp. There are a lot of features, such as a front-loaded mono/stereo effects loop.
I bagged one of these brand new for $199.99 when they were blown out in 2001 and use it as my bedroom amp. I think MSRP was something around $599.
bongolation said:I just noticed this application note (hey, I'm reading the thread backwards!) and I want to add a point to my Blues Junior comments above.
I got the Blues Junior for exactly the same purpose and found it totally unsuitable for two main reasons: One, the reverb circuit hiss on most of the MIAs is such that it results in an unacceptable noise floor for recording at low volumes and, two, the amp has to be really cranked to sound good. Low-volume recording levels don't cut it on the Blues Junior and it's a loud 15WRMS, as any owner will tell you. The Blues Junior sounds OK when you really open it up but it's nothing special at lower volumes.
A few months ago, I talked with a studio engineer about the Blues Junior's problems and he said that he had recorded "dozens" of them from various production runs and approximately half had the reverb noise to an objectionable level.
So, check it out on the one you buy. Fender uses just about the cheapest board components on these, so the noise tends to accumulate.