Page 4 of 4

Re: Amps and Moddage

Posted: Thu May 07, 2009 1:28 pm
by steve cyr
I bought a Peavey Classic 30 amp about 3 years ago, and while it was a darn good amp for the money, the speaker just didn't quite make it. It was a "Blue Marvel" which (I'm guessing) means a bottom-of-the line speaker made by Eminence. I don't have any other way to describe the sound but to say it sounded like cardboard.

Well, Carvin was selling off some Celestion G12P-80 speakers for $29.99 about 2 years ago, so I bought one, and installed it in my Classic 30. Now that amp sounds like it's supposed to sound. The improvement was even more than I expected. I sold the Blue Marvel speaker on Ebay for almost as much as the Celestion cost me. :-)

The only other mod I did was to install one of those gadgets to keep the power tubes (four x EL84) non-microphonic - it consists of a piece of 1/2" thin-wall conduit with one small hole with a high-temp grommet for the tip of each tube. The tubing is held in place by springs at each end. Bought this gadget on Ebay for $20. It eliminated the microphonic problem instantly.

I have two other amps:

1) A Marshall VS65R, which is a hybrid since it has one 12AX7A tube in the preamp section. Very nice amp, but it has developed a noise problem lately - tendency to make snap crackle pop noises, usually during the Pastor's sermon, of course. So it went home, and the Classic 30 took up residence at the church.

2) A Crate 15-watt XT15R that I bought when the new Guitar Center opened a couple of years ago. All solid state, of course, but an impressive little beast for the $50 I paid for it. It has some digital effects built in, and the reverb ain't bad at all.

Re: Amps and Moddage

Posted: Fri May 08, 2009 10:50 am
by Eben
I love Peaveys, especially their bass amps.

Yeah, you never can tell what a diff things will make until you do it, and it's fun to boot!

A couple of the things about this Palomino that really impressed me were the detachable power supply, (much less shock danger), and the power tubes have such a device as you're describing already - Very smart little touches that we wouldn't even see if we weren't screwing around under the hood! They don't make this V18's any more, and you can find them for a really good price here and there - If you do, grab it, you'll love it!

E

Re: Amps and Moddage

Posted: Fri May 08, 2009 5:23 pm
by steve cyr
Eben wrote:I love Peaveys, especially their bass amps.
For several years my bass rig was a Peavey 1820 cabinet (1 x 18" black widow + 2 x 10" Scorpions) driven by a Peavey bass preamp and a Peavey 8.5C power amp in biamp mode. Sounded great, and handled loads of power, but too *(^$%#$ heavy for mere mortals. Now I'm using a Carvin 1 x 15" cabinet driven by a small Behringer mixer and a QSC RMX850 power amp in bridged mode. Definitely easier to move around if needed, but it has taken up permanent residence at the church anyhoo. :-)
Eben wrote:Yeah, you never can tell what a diff things will make until you do it, and it's fun to boot!
This is so, but I was pretty sure it was gonna improve things. That Blue Marvel was pretty bad - muddy and cardboardy, like I said.
Eben wrote:A couple of the things about this Palomino that really impressed me were the detachable power supply, (much less shock danger), and the power tubes have such a device as you're describing already - Very smart little touches that we wouldn't even see if we weren't screwing around under the hood! They don't make this V18's any more, and you can find them for a really good price here and there - If you do, grab it, you'll love it!
The Peavey is now really excellent - small enough to be reasonably portable, with a very good reverb, great sound, and I'm very happy with it. Can't see a need for more than three guitar amps, anyway. Unless a Twin Reverb happens to come along when I can afford it! :-)

Re: Amps and Moddage

Posted: Sat Sep 12, 2009 9:51 pm
by Down and Outman
I wish I still had my old bass amp. My fave was a Sunn Collesium 880 head with 2-15" JBL K-145's and an 18" JBL K-151. Played a Rickenbacker bass thru it. Like a fool I sold it all as my family life was taking it's toll on being able to play. Gee I think of all the guitars and basses I have had and what they are worth now. Never sell your stuff. I also had a Marshall 100 watt lead head at one time, for bass of course. I now have a Yamaha 100 watt bass head with parametric equalizers in it and 2-12" Peavey Black Widows in a homemade cab for bass at church. My guitar amp is a Fender HotRod Deluxe, an older one made in USA. Tubes rule for guitar. My acoustic sounds great thru it as well.

Re: Amps and Moddage

Posted: Sun Sep 13, 2009 3:30 pm
by Eben
Now see how cool this is?

THIS is what threads are supposed to do!

A new guy or gal comes along, pokes around, finds something that sparks their fancy, and a pretty cool thread is reborn! I LOVE this place!

E

Re: Amps and Moddage

Posted: Sun Sep 13, 2009 7:10 pm
by steve cyr
Hmmm - Thread Hijack Number 2:

I have a Marshall VS65R (12AX7A preamp, everything else SS, with a 12" Marshall Gold-back speaker, spring reverb). It's a great little amp, but in the last year it has developed an occasional rather loud snap-crackle-pop that makes it no longer very useful. When it's not making its obnoxious F*rting noises it sounds as good as it always did. Any ideas what might be causing it? I have a theory that the 12AX7A needs to be replaced. Does that sound reasonable enough to try?

--Steve

Re: Amps and Moddage

Posted: Sun Sep 13, 2009 7:14 pm
by steve cyr
Down and Outman wrote:Never sell your stuff.
I hear that! Two items I wish I could get back:

1) The Fender Bassman 100 head I let go for $100 about 20 years ago

2) The '69 Fender Twin Reverb I sold to my brother-in-law about 10 years ago.

--Steve