OK. I'm getting sick of the cheap tone of my existing amp, a Peavey Classic 100.
First, it's over powered. 100 watts in a tube head is worthless unless you are playing an arena. With this much power, you can't get the "tube magic" at anything less than earsplitting levels. It also uses EL-84 power tubes, and while I LOVE the sound of these tube usually, they are terrible in this amp. Probably because it's 100W while most 100W amps use 4 big tubes like a 6L6s or EL34s instead of EIGHT weenie little EL84s.
So here's the short list of amps that are looking good:
1) Mesa Boogie Lonestar Special ($1700)
2) VOX AC30 Custom Classic ($1000)
3) Fender Blues Junior ($400)
The Boogie is probably EXACTLY what I want, but there aren't any local to me that I can try. I LOVE the fact that you can select 5W 15W and 30W power level for each channel. PERFECT. Boogies are also built like tanks, and hold up.
The VOX AC30 is a classic 30W amp that needs no introduction. It's probably the most-recorded amp in history,and it sounds magical. I've played one for a couple gigs (it was a rental) and it was beyond incredible for tone. The only problem is that reissue AC30s are a fortune, and all the new ones are made in China, and quality is suspect. Many are bad right out of the box
The Blues Junior is a good little amp, and affordable. But it's chintzy, made in Mexico junk. But it IS tube and sounds pretty decent overall. Reliability is probably suspect. But it would get me into a low-power (15W) TUBE guitar amp with decent tone at reasonable volumes, at relatively low cost. It's also a nice compact 30lb package, compared to the 80lb Behemoth of larger Fenders (like a Twin) and the VOX AC30.
I may be able to get down to Denver and play the Mesa Boogie this Friday. I'm sure it may be my dream amp.
How I'm going to afford a $1800 amplifier is another story, but one with a silver lining. Spending money on music is MUCH more valid, imo, because it's a "lifetime" purchase. You don't have an amp rust out, blow a headgasket, or get in an accident. It's not going to get obsolete like a vehicle does. In short, I can play it when I'm old and gray (like my guitars), long after my truck is history.
I'd appreciate any input from the guitar-playing peanut gallery.
Justin
First, it's over powered. 100 watts in a tube head is worthless unless you are playing an arena. With this much power, you can't get the "tube magic" at anything less than earsplitting levels. It also uses EL-84 power tubes, and while I LOVE the sound of these tube usually, they are terrible in this amp. Probably because it's 100W while most 100W amps use 4 big tubes like a 6L6s or EL34s instead of EIGHT weenie little EL84s.
So here's the short list of amps that are looking good:
1) Mesa Boogie Lonestar Special ($1700)
2) VOX AC30 Custom Classic ($1000)
3) Fender Blues Junior ($400)
The Boogie is probably EXACTLY what I want, but there aren't any local to me that I can try. I LOVE the fact that you can select 5W 15W and 30W power level for each channel. PERFECT. Boogies are also built like tanks, and hold up.
The VOX AC30 is a classic 30W amp that needs no introduction. It's probably the most-recorded amp in history,and it sounds magical. I've played one for a couple gigs (it was a rental) and it was beyond incredible for tone. The only problem is that reissue AC30s are a fortune, and all the new ones are made in China, and quality is suspect. Many are bad right out of the box

The Blues Junior is a good little amp, and affordable. But it's chintzy, made in Mexico junk. But it IS tube and sounds pretty decent overall. Reliability is probably suspect. But it would get me into a low-power (15W) TUBE guitar amp with decent tone at reasonable volumes, at relatively low cost. It's also a nice compact 30lb package, compared to the 80lb Behemoth of larger Fenders (like a Twin) and the VOX AC30.
I may be able to get down to Denver and play the Mesa Boogie this Friday. I'm sure it may be my dream amp.
How I'm going to afford a $1800 amplifier is another story, but one with a silver lining. Spending money on music is MUCH more valid, imo, because it's a "lifetime" purchase. You don't have an amp rust out, blow a headgasket, or get in an accident. It's not going to get obsolete like a vehicle does. In short, I can play it when I'm old and gray (like my guitars), long after my truck is history.
I'd appreciate any input from the guitar-playing peanut gallery.
Justin