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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Gear »

Permalink Anybody use a Hombre or Fender Chris Stapleton for surf?

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Anybody use a Hombre or Fender Chris Stapleton for surf?

I like the looks of these and size and weight, and want to replace some noisy heavy dinosaurs! Also will be used for some rockabilly, and planning on buying a matching Fender Reverb Tank sooner or later.

I will never play super loud, so I don't think headroom would be a problem would be a problem, but maybe it would? Main concern is the single tone knob and dailing in good surf tone. I have a Tone King Grande with the single tone knob and I don't have much luck getting that to sound like I like.

So any input from anybody using these would be great. thanks

I built a 6G2 Princeton amp that is in a cabinet with a 12" speaker, so it's similar to the Stapleton Princeton. It sounds beautiful and the sound is great for surf, especially with a SurfyBear in front of it. It doesn't get very loud. Single tone knob works just fine for dialing in a good sound. The bias tremolo sounds awesome.

I love my Fender '62 Princeton Chris Stapleton Edition and I play surf music @ home with it often. I consider it my mini Fender Bassman, as it sounds (at home volumes) very similar to the '62 Bassman I had and eventually sold to a friend.

For gigging, I would likely mic the 12 watt '62 Princeton Chris Stapleton Edition amp for optimal use unless you have a quiet drummer. If I were to play out, I'd use either my '62 Pro or '63 Bandmaster (both 40 watts).

Since out of production, used Fender '63 Reissue Reverb Units have gone up in price via Reverb and eBay. The last time I checked, I saw prices vary from $800 - $1000. I highly recommend the less expensive Surfy Industries SurfyBear offerings (Classic, Metal, and Compact) that you can purchase brand new.

Used SurfyBear Reverb Units come up for sale now and again in SG101's For Sale section or elsewhere like on Reverb. I have two SurfyBear Classic Reverb Units as well as a SurfyBear Compact (that has a permanent home on my pedalboard).

I have a '64 Fender Reverb Unit. In the past, I've owned a Fender '63 Reissue Reverb Unit and it was OK. However, I feel the SurfyBear Reverb Unit nails that vintage sound better than the Fender '63 Reissue Unit. As always, YMMV and best of luck!

The doofus formerly known as Snorre
Surfysonic on YouTube
World Famous Philistines: 2014 - 2015
K39: 2013 - 2014
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gv9JADQ4ukw

The Surfy Bear Classic v.30 that's out now really nails the sound well!

Thanks for the responses

I've got an Hombre casually for sale and was plugging it in again before maybe consigning it. I played a little surf and it sounded surprisingly good. It's middy and a little honky and breaks up earlier than many amps, but it's cool!

Neptune Trojans

Just a little FYI, Chris Stapleton's lead guitarist, Michael Eli Lopinto, plays a SurfyBear Classic. Chris also has one too, as does their producer, Dave Cobb.

http://www.satanspilgrims.com
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Satans-Pilgrims/8210228553
https://satanspilgrims.bandcamp.com/
http://www.surfyindustries.com

spskins wrote:

Just a little FYI, Chris Stapleton's lead guitarist, Michael Eli Lopinto, plays a SurfyBear Classic. Chris also has one too, as does their producer, Dave Cobb, along with the Studio model.

http://www.satanspilgrims.com
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Satans-Pilgrims/8210228553
https://satanspilgrims.bandcamp.com/
http://www.surfyindustries.com

I have a Winfield Tremor which is very similar to the ‘62 Princeton circuit. It sounds great for Surf and the bias varying tremolo is excellent. I’ve played the Stapleton model and the sound is pretty much identical. It’s probably the surfiest sounding amp I own.

The artist formerly known as: Synchro

When Surf Guitar is outlawed only outlaws will play Surf Guitar.

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