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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Gear »

Permalink Peavey VB-2 bass head?

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Anyone have experience with the Peavey VB-2, 225 watt tube amp for Bass? We're giving up on the Bassman 100 that my son has been using in our surf band as it flubs out with the volume around four, apparently something wrong but I can't seem to trace the source. I don't have any experience with any other Bassman 100s and have no idea what their capabilities are volume/headroom wise. So, we're now looking for something that will keep a good tight bottom end at higher volume for outdoor gigs. Any info much appreciated.

http://www.guitarcenter.com/Peavey-Tour-VB-2-Tube-Bass-Amp-Head-104845607-i1386277.gc?esid=peavey+vb+2

Danny Ellison aka dubtrub

Looks very nice...sort of similar design to the older Mesa Bass 400 all-tube design...

http://www.guitarcenter.com/In-Store-Used-USED-MESA-BOOGIE-400--BASS-HEAD-107119299-i2229397.gc

My bass player uses an Orange Tiny Terror 500W head. Really nice and compact, sounds good to me. They also do a 1000W version. Recommend you check one out.
http://www.orangeamps.com/bass-terror-1000/

http://thewaterboarders.bandcamp.com/

Hey, I have a VB-2 and love it. There is not much info about them. One good resource is Talkbass.com, there's actually a Peavey amp engineer who frequently posts there with helpful info you wouldn't find otherwise. His username on TB is "BbbyBld".

I got mine used for $550 plus a fuzz pedal in exchange for the shipping cost. I use it with a Hartke 410XL, which I would like to replace as soon as I get some spending money.
I bought it for its versatility. You can really coax a lot of sounds out of it -- it's not restricted to a single voicing, like how you can pick out an Ampeg sound pretty easily a lot of times. I don't have anything against that, I just wanted it to be fairly "neutral", I guess. I use my pedals for all the coloring.

The clean channel (which I prefer) is good and I tend to use it with the gain set lower, around 10 o'clock or so. If I'm using the drive channel, it is also with the gain set low. The amp distortion is not bad, but I prefer using pedals for that. The EQ controls have a pretty wide range and there's plenty of mids to go around. I was really impressed with the "presence" and "resonance" controls. When I first played it, I wasn't hearing much of a difference but after some use I found that a little bit goes a long way. If you want a twangy, fast bassline turn the resonance down and add some presence. It's really useful.

It also has some other cool features, like how you can use it as a tube DI without even having a cab connected; as long as you don't take it off of "standby" with no cab, the EQ controls still apply to its DI.

It can get loud and has a good amount of clean headroom, but I was kinda surprised by how high I had to set the volume to get it "really loud". I believe this is a cab issue, specifically an issue with the driver sensitivity. Basically I feel that the cab I have isn't optimal for this head. I will have to try another one sometime. I do feel that you would have no problem keeping up with the band with one of these. If you can find one for a good price I'd say it's worth it. I don't think I'd pay $1k for one, but again I got mine for half that price and am very happy.

Sorry if reading this post is kinda tiring, I'm tired myself lol
Do you want an all-tube head specifically? Like da-ron's post, there are some really nice hybrid amps out there; I have a Hartke HA3500 (bought for $250 used) 350watt head and it gets very loud, very fast while staying totally clean, and it sounds pretty good with dirt pedals. If you distort the amp itself though, it sounds like butt.

Last edited: Nov 13, 2011 17:51:06

Great overview Achtane. Thanks for the replies. In particular we really dig the tube sound. We have a 300 watt solid state Carvin stack with two cabinets, a 4x10 and an 18. It's nice and punchy but just doesn't sound as good as the Bassman 100. The Bassman just doesn't seem to be generating but about 20-25 watts of power before it starts breaking up. We've tried it with different cabinets and speakers and have decided to move on. We just picked up an Ampeg 410 PR-HLF http://www.ampeg.com/products/pro/pr410hlf/index.html and would like to get a head with the tube sound but yet retain punchy clean sound with a lot of volume. Not looking for anything that overdrives distorts or any other FX but would like a lot clean loud headroom.

Danny Ellison aka dubtrub

Last edited: Nov 13, 2011 19:01:41

strangely, the original Fender Bassman series of amps (50 and 100 and 135)all seem to be much better guitar amps than bass amps...

oddly, (and conversely) the Fender Showman amps seem to make GREAT bass amps!

I wish you wouldn't have said that DP.

Jeff(bigtikidude)

I had a Mesa Boogie Buster head, which was a 200 watt 6L6 Bassman clone and it was a beast. I could not imagine needing anything more. Prior to that I used a 100 watt Ampeg Rocket reissue combo with a 15". I still have that amp and will probably always keep it.

Here's the now discontinued Buster from the Mesa Boogie website.

I was never happy with it but I used the absolute cheapest cabs I could get with it. If you could find one I bet it'd be great for what you want.

Dave, how much do you push a Showman for bass? Or do you feel it's being "pushed" all that much? I know The X-Rays/Surge's bass player, Mitch, used one of Eddie Katcher's Showmans for bass for a while until he purchased a newer Fender head. When I was strictly a bass player the forum talk was all about headroom and juice...so I started at 100 watts and moved up, but a local pro that does luthier work swore by smaller tube heads. He particularly liked Sunn amps, several models around 35-45 watts, one of which I sold him because I couldn't really figure out what to do with it. He still has it and does all types of gigs year-round with them.

The Mystery Men?
El Capitan and The Reluctant Sadists
SSS Agent #31

Last edited: Nov 17, 2011 06:39:31

bigtikidude wrote:

I wish you wouldn't have said that DP.

In my experience, the Fender Bassman 135 doesn't work well with modern cabinets. This is because modern cabinets are designed for 400W solid-state amps. They can take the power, but they are inefficient and you won't get volume. The 135 works great with the original 2-15 JBL cabinet. Those speakers are very efficient and get very loud, but they'll blow every so often.

Also, none of the Fender Bassman amps will work as bass amps unless the power supply caps and power tubes are in good shape. Expect to pay about $200 for a recapping/retubing from a tech who won't ruin your amp.

If it ain't broke, fix it until it is.

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