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Post by Johnkenn on Oct 2, 2019 18:17:08 GMT -6
(Ducks)
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Post by Johnkenn on Oct 2, 2019 18:23:03 GMT -6
I actually like the idea of this. All the processing power used to focus on getting ONE amp right.
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Post by Bender on Oct 2, 2019 23:04:49 GMT -6
Even if it sounds great, and clips do from skipping around, I can never get past modern amps being built on pcb's, I much prefer the boutique & real deal amps of yesteryear with turret boards for bullet proof maintenance and lifespan for ease of repair; I suppose I'm old school like that..+ nothing quite smells like a 68 fender when its warm...
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Post by guitfiddler on Oct 3, 2019 7:47:53 GMT -6
I was just looking at a very old Princeton yesterday, the grill was ripped, it looked like it had been through hell and back, however...that was tone! I like a well used look on my amp with plenty of battle scars! I was also demoing a Tone King Imperial MkII. The Tone King was in mint condition, so I just couldn't do that...It needed some cosmetic character like the Princeton. I haven’t heard the Tone Master, but looking at some of the product videos on you tube sounds like people are liking it. I will definitely have to check it out.
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Post by Ned Ward on Oct 3, 2019 11:15:37 GMT -6
Even if it sounds great, and clips do from skipping around, I can never get past modern amps being built on pcb's, I much prefer the boutique & real deal amps of yesteryear with turret boards for bullet proof maintenance and lifespan for ease of repair; I suppose I'm old school like that..+ nothing quite smells like a 68 fender when its warm... I guess not a fan of Mesa or Soldano then. PCB boards aren't inherently bad - pedals are full of them. It's how they're used and the design and quality process that matters. I do draw the line at PC-board mounted tube sockets.
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Post by Johnkenn on Oct 9, 2019 17:44:42 GMT -6
Heard one of these today - they sound great.
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