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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Gear »

Permalink Who uses a non-traditional surf guitar rig?

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LHR

DennistheMenace
Do you have a pic of your 1956 Bigsby-equipped Magnatone Mark V??? I don't recall ever seeing a 1956....??? Rolling Eyes

Sure do...
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what a nice guitar !!!!!

El Papu & los Fantasticos Reverberantes

LHR

DennistheMenace
Do you have a pic of your 1956 Bigsby-equipped Magnatone Mark V??? I don't recall ever seeing a 1956....??? Rolling Eyes

Sure do...but, my mistake, it's a '57...
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HOLY KRAPPPP! Shocked
That's One Sweet Lookin Piece my Friend. So this body style was out B4
Gibson's Double-Cut LP JRs!!!.....NICE!!! Wink

.......make the Mos' of it,
.....choose the 'rite stuff!
.........owner of 9 Mosrites
proud owner and documented:
1963 "The Ventures" Model s/n# 0038
http://www.vintagerock4.com
www.mosriteforum.com

zak
I did say most...I'm glad to hear your experience has been positive. Will Peavey still repair, retube, and ship back an amp after the warranty has expired? If so, that is a very commendable business practice. I don't know about contemporary Peavey amps, but in the 80s everyone had one (whether they want to admit it or not hahaha) and they were solid as bricks.

You got that right, Zak. I cut my teeth on a Peavey Classic 212VT amp. My first amp was an old Supro that I bought at a pawnshop in 1979, but it was old, and I wanted something new and modern, so the first chance I got (in 1980), I rid myself of that Supro and bought myself a brand-newish Peavey Classic. Yes, at 15 years of age, this was the first of many foolish gear acquisitions/dumps. I must say, though, that Peavey Classic was a tank, and it didn't sound bad with an ElectroHarmonix Muff/Fuzz in front of it for my junior high/ high school punk/new wave band days... Rolling Eyes

LosDerrumbes
We use Fender amps, a 100W silverface Twin Reverb and a '65 Bandmaster and Fender reverb tanks but Teisco, not Fender, guitars and bass, matching '64 KL.4 and KL-3 guitars and an EB-2 bass.

...and you guys make one hell of a good surf sound with those Teisco Del Reys!

Viva Teisco, y viva Los Derrumbes!

zak
Back to the original topic - there's LOTS of great stuff out there that doesn't say "Fender" on it, and can be had for practically peanuts. Up here in Cana-duh the pawnshops used to be full of 70s Traynor amps, which are huge bang-for-buck, unfortunately people seem to think that they should all be modded into Marshalls.

You're right there. My friend's dad owns one of those 70s Traynors, and it sounds amazing.

DennistheMenace

LHR

DennistheMenace
Do you have a pic of your 1956 Bigsby-equipped Magnatone Mark V??? I don't recall ever seeing a 1956....??? Rolling Eyes

Sure do...but, my mistake, it's a '57...

image

Those frets are almost non-existant, (my kind of guitar Wink ) I would love to play one of these babys! Great pics of a very nice Guitar.

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 20:14:24

I bought a 65 Standel for my Mosrite. The Mosrite was being fixed uip so I didn't have a chance to play through it with the Mosrtie before buying it.

Funny, I like the sounds I'm getting through the clean channel of my Carvin X100B better.

I've also been thinking about a Peavey Delta Blues. Hartley Peavey says it's the best amp they've ever made. You all using the 15" speaker model?

Oh, and I really like the sound of my '75 Ovation Viper dripping with reverb too. No trem though. I think a trem is mandatory for a surf axe isn't it?

zak

DennistheMenace

LHR
For the record, some of the tastiest guitar sounds I have ever gotten came out of my Bigsby-equipped 1956 Magnatone Mark V thru an old Ampeg Reverberocket. It could surf all day. And more.

Do you have a pic of your 1956 Bigsby-equipped Magnatone Mark V???
I don't recall ever seeing a 1956....??? Rolling Eyes

LHR, make him post pictures of his nine Mosrites first, I've been waiting to see that s/n# 0038 for a long time now.
Laughing Laughing Laughing

Enough of this hillbilly guitar nonsense. Post pictures of your Mosrites, how about?

SSIV

Damon67
I've also been thinking about a Peavey Delta Blues. Hartley Peavey says it's the best amp they've ever made. You all using the 15" speaker model?

I used to have both the 1x15" and the 2x10" models. Unless you are using a Baritone, then the difference isn't as much as you'd think. I have a mild preference for the 2x10. However, I think the 2x10 is just great used with a Celestion G12H extension cab (the internal speakers stay on also).

Of course, if you use the Classic 30 head (same amp without tremolo) you can choose whichever speakers you want to use. The internal Blue Marvels in the Delta Blues (made by Eminence) are pretty good but the available volume and 'size' goes up a lot with a 12" extension.

I now have the Delta Blues 2x10 and The Classic 30 head - I'm very happy with both.

http://www.myspace.com/thepashuns

Youth and enthusiasm are no match for age and treachery.

As an aside: Some video clips of an interview with Hartley Peavey - his response to the question of amp pricing is pretty interesting:

http://www.sweetwater.com/feature/peavey/

Fundamentally he says - 'it's not that we are cheap - it's just that everyone else is charging too much for what you are actually getting'

http://www.myspace.com/thepashuns

Youth and enthusiasm are no match for age and treachery.

Gibson Les Paul Melody Maker or Gibson Les Paul Faded Double Cut through a Peavey Classic 50/212. Definitely not traditional, but it's the personal surf sound I was looking for. About as close to traditional as I get is the single coil pickups; single P90 on the Melody Maker, and dual P90s on the Faded Double Cut.

Matt

Fast Cars & Loud Guitars!

I have an Ibanez af75 T into a Crate rfx200s. Not very traditional for surf at all.
For those who don't know it, the RFX200 is a major sleeper in SS amps. The clean channel is very tubey and nice. The reverb is actually pretty lush but I have started...Well...I know what I will prolly get for saying this but here goes... I use a digitech rp150 or 300 set to only reverb and using the Fender reverb model. It is quite good with all the springy sounds an nice trails. It's as close I I will get to the real thing for a while.
Then again I am also not playing straight, traditional surf either.

I use a Gretsch Duo Jet with Dynasonic (single-coil) pickups. It's not quite the Fender sound but it is very strong and has more than enough treble.

The artist formerly known as: Synchro

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

I use a Gretsch with TV Jones Power'tron pickups.
Not exactly the tone I'm after, but I'll be swapping out the bridge pup for a diff TV Jones soon.

So that through a SRRI and no stand alone reverb unit, I had one but it was all sorts of messed up so I sold it.

Not exactly trad, but it does what I need it to do and very well I might add.

The Phantomatics on Facebook
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The Phantomatics on Bandcamp

This is my "unusual" rig:

  • Squier Jagmaster with custom strato singlecoils
    DIY Stage Centre Reverb (I did it myself)
    Pignose G40-V (all tubes bassmaster-inspired circuit, VERY good)
    and a Monachor Echo Chamber to add some Rockabilly slapbacks
    and (ehm...) Underberg: der natürliche Kräuter-Digestif !!!
    image

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Docteur Legume Et Les Surfwerks

http://doclegume.blogspot.com
http://www.youtube.com/doclegume

"We're gonna draw a little bit of everybody's blood 'cause we're gonna find out who's THE THING"

Last edited: Oct 31, 2008 07:47:15

Many moons ago, when I was actually playing with Shrimp Chaperone, I used my 93 SG Jr. Not exactly a surf-y guitar, but it worked well for rhythm.

This guitar still has more twang/spank/presence than my little Duo Sonic.

image

CP Fender Jaguar, Weber 5E7, Tore Vibe, SF Champ.

OnlyVees
Many moons ago, when I was actually playing with Shrimp Chaperone, I used my 93 SG Jr. Not exactly a surf-y guitar, but it worked well for rhythm.

This guitar still has more twang/spank/presence than my little Duo Sonic.

image

i want your guitar. it a beauty.

There are alot of high end amp makers now that have gone to military spec or double sided PCB boards, i would have no problem buying (just bought one actually) from these makers if you do your homework on the components, build quality, how there mounted, gold flashes etc etc.

for non trad surf stuff i play through a Genz Benz black pearl, orange tiny terror, and a reverend goblin.

I get great classic surf tones out of my DiPinto Galaxie 4 guitars played through an Ampeg Reverberocket 212 reissue and a Guyatone outboard spring reverb tank. All the parts are there, and they sound spot on, but nothing says "Fender" on it! My whole rig cost me about 1/3 of what a comparable Fender rig would have cost. That means a lot to me!

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