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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Gear »

Permalink Real Amps vs. Fake Amps!

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I couldn't help it... Realized I was taking over the shoutbox, and figured a thread would be more suitable.

So, the great debate. Or, one of them. Good to have these talks every once in a while.

Amps.

Tube? Solid State? Modeling? Virtual? And, of course, why?

Go!

IMO.

Tube.

Only technology that doesn't currently require a PA. Solid State amps aren't powerful enough, virtual... obviously.

Also, how tube push. I know exactly where, when, and why it starts to push. I know what it does to my tone, I know how to play with it. And it sounds brilliant. And amp that is pushing is incredibly important, that is the difference between sounding like shit and sounding brilliant. Turn a tube amp under 3-4 and it is terrible!

Solid State, haven't tried the modern offerings. Owned some shit ones back in the day(shit but where supposedly nice for the time).

I'm really into going direct into Logic Pro X. I really get to build my own sound in it. I could use it live... but wouldn't. The level of trust need with the sound guy is WAY too high. I'd record with it though, in a heartbeat.

What qualifies as a "real" amp??

Enjoying the surf,sun and sand!!

Solidstate. Quilters. 1000 bucks for a suitable one. gigable too. I heard the High Fidelics guitarist hang in with DD one nite. 1 small amp
with 1-12 hang in with 2 showmans and 3-15's. Edwin's quilter was more brilliant than DD's rig.
I've had 300 and 400 buck US made tube amps that sounded like crap. I've heard high end tube amps that sound like crap. I've had both that died when pushed hard. to me, tubes are not reliable and require too much maintenance--IMHO.
Years ago I had a silverface deluxe that sounded wonderful...but it eventually died. Replaced it with a Sunn Solarus that was great. it eventually died. When I say died I mean after the 3rd time it blew, I'm done with it. too much maintenance. I blew a Peavey Triumph 120 that actually burned when it blew. Amp repair shops were "dicey" in Memphis
back then. my opinion on Marshalls is unprintable. My Peavey Renown was SS and great! My Peavey Deuce was great and I couldn't tell you what it was. My Peavey Classic 50 was crap and it was hybrid.
Bang for the buck is what I'm looking for. great sound and great price, light weight for portability and low maintenance costs. I don't buy amps because my guitar heroes use something in particular--or my guitars.

If I could afford it, I would buy a Quilter amp. I probably would never buy another amp at my age once I got a Quilter. A Quilter would be for pure EGO cuz I don't play out anymore. no band and I no longer record. I play at home for my own pleasure. My ZT twins work fine for me.

Solidstate. Anyone else is welcome to play whatever they want to use!! Thumbs Up

Enjoying the surf,sun and sand!!

What is funny is that voice and need is all that matters!

I like my Quilter quite a lot but for gig'ing with a loud band, it's best to use a second cabinet (I don't have the 12" version - it's the MicroPro with 8" speaker). I recently used it at a gig without an extended cabinet and I had to push it fairly hard. I still keep a number of Fender tube amps for the more trad gigs.

"Hello Girls!"

Jake--please explain voice and need. I'm not sure what you mean. Help

Enjoying the surf,sun and sand!!

I dunno. What I think is so great about "Old Iron" tube amps is that they define the sound of popular music, are cheaply repaired/rebuilt, and can be kept running virtually forever. Robust build and discrete (quality) parts has made amps Leo Fender and a few others built highly desirable over the last 6 decades. Like with used cars, resale value of vintage amps is inversely proportionate to cost of repair. Repairmen love old Fenders, and they became industry standard, because they were easy to fix, like old American cars.
I can't say anything about newer, more sophisticated amps as I avoid anything that costs 50% of purchase price to repair when it breaks down. And all gear breaks down eventually.
So real vs. fake is simple. Most classic rock was recorded with players on 'standard' gear. And the same gear – I mean the specific amps – is still around, because it's rugged and the parts that wear can be switched out readily. Any perusal of Craigslist will turn up a large number of old Fender amps, at prices below the new ones. And in my opinion, they are better amps because of their simple design and quality parts+workmanship. Just make sure to hire a reputable amp tech to keep an old amp in tune. There's no secret to it.

Squink Out!

Voice is what people find alluring about the amp. That is... What tonal possibilities can I get out of this, does it fit the 'voice' of the music I am trying to make.

And then need... What situation am I playing in? Do I have a PA? Do I have a band to keep up with/does it fit within this band? Is it easy to gig with/do I have time to set this up? Am I using pedals? Does this amp take pedals well?

I see what you mean about voice. good on that. need seems to mean more about application than anything else if I get you right.
Gotcha!! Cheers

Now, what else should matter??

Enjoying the surf,sun and sand!!

Last edited: Sep 26, 2014 00:56:09

Yeah, musical application and practical application!

JO--I get your point. Fender's tube amps are easily fixed and parts are around. I loved my old deluxe!
One bad thing about SS amps. a lot of them are throwaway as in disposable. candidates for the trash pile after they blow. or morph 'em into extension speakers. a lot of nasties are created during production of 'em too.

Makes me wonder it I should just sell all my electric guitars and amps.
just go acoustic. au natural. naked guitar music. Hmmm

Enjoying the surf,sun and sand!!

Just hate stuff that can't be fixed. Amps are not like guitars, which are so personal. Players switch out amps every couple years just to try something else. But the bond with an axe can be lifelong.

Squink Out!

JObeast wrote:

Just hate stuff that can't be fixed. Amps are not like guitars, which are so personal. Players switch out amps every couple years just to try something else. But the bond with an axe can be lifelong.

How about if it doesn't go wrong in the first place. Tube amps are enormously wasteful power wise, create heat, pushes components to the limit. The Quilter is so efficient it doesn't break a sweat at 50 watts RMS. Theoretically a solid state amp with a good design and components could last YOUR lifetime and beyond.

Crumble has a valid point here, I think: Most companies consider solid state a cheapo-technology, that can be exploited to sell small amps to beginners, which will in the long run spend money again to buy a tube amp. So the most of these amps are build with little care to sound and quality.

But there are of course also companies, who do it right and whose amps have become sought after models in some circles. Do they sound like tube amps? Probably not. But they sound "good" in their own way, get the job done, are easier to transport and need less service. I mean: How often have you read about somebody complaining, that their Roland Jazz Chorus amp broke down again? Probably not that often. Wink

Los Apollos - cinematic surf music trio (Berlin)
"Postcards from the Scrapyard" Vol. 1, 2 & 3 NOW available on various platforms!
"Chaos at the Lobster Lounge" available as LP and download on Surf Cookie Records!

Different tools for different applications. They each have their pros and cons.

Old punks never die... They just become surf rockers.

I'm getting some chuckles from reading this thread.
To wit - "Tube amps are enormously wasteful power wise, create heat, pushes components to the limit."
Well - let's take that statement apart.
"Tube amps are enormously wasteful power wise"
Let's see - they use 110 volts - just like a SS amp. Worried about wasting power? - don't turn on the lights, then. BTW, If the power generated by your local utility isn't used, it's lost (as in wasted?).
".. Create heat"
Transistors create heat also.. that's why the power transistors in an SS amp are on heat sinks. Transistors are semi-conductors of electricity. That implies electrical resistance - which generates heat. Pesky laws of physics working there. But would you rather that they generate cold?
"..Pushes components to the limit" - easy fix there - get a TUBE amp with top quality components.

I have one SS amp - an old Kustom Sidewinder. It's OK if I have some rare silly musical attack to play some dirty blues.
All my other amps are tube - Sunns for EL34, Fenders for 6L6, and Bedrock for EL84(which knocks the hell out of any Vox AC30 I've ever heard). They're all tube, all point to point wiring, all with top end components.
I avoid modeling amps. Music is analog, not digital. I have enough computers in my life.
BTW - this is why I also drive older cars (with newer drive trains). They are easier to service like a point-to-point wired tube amp. And by today's standards, they guzzle gas - which balances out with the eco-whacko global warming/climate change crowd out there. There has to be balance in this world.
In short, I like simple and keep it simple.
Simply my humble opinion, of course
J Mo'

J'Mo,
You spurred me to pine nostalgic for when I would clean and re-gap my spark plugs, and adjust my carburator on my Ford Torino.
What I like about tube amps is how you can push them into that sweet spot of break-up and compression, or clean-up with a warm twang all by adjusting the guitars volume knob. And I'm talking surf music.

JohnnyMosrite wrote:

I'm getting some chuckles from reading this thread.

Great I'm glad I made you grin!

Been trying to find an article written by Pat Quilter concerning the inadequacies of conventional transformers and his switchmode technology power supply but I can't find it. It's an interesting read and may have swayed your opinion a little if it was available.

Last edited: Sep 26, 2014 09:16:12

I prefer tube amps live. If we don't play with a PA it is really necessary, and with a PA, just a nice sound. They can be unreliable on occassion (had a tube go at a gig in the summer, and ended up going direct into the PA), but if they are serviced regularly then they are more reliable. I prefer the way they break up when pushed.

I haven't played through a solid state that I could get a sound I liked for surf. I did use a Roland Stereo Chorus for a clean amp in my metal days (with a 5150 stack for the dirt).

Recording wise I have used both tube amps ,and the modelling amps in Logic Pro. It all depends on the engineer for sound quality.

Overall I think a good guitarist can work with whatever is given to him/her, and get a reasonable sound.

Rev

Canadian Surf

http://www.urbansurfkings.com/

Last edited: Sep 26, 2014 09:50:48

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