... in the name of guitar
Lost your password or username? Click here

Not a member already? Join now It's free!
PlaneTalk
GFB&B Radio
Members Online: 324 | Discussions: 19,829 | Replies 207,084 | Members: 84,073 | Register here

 
If you are seeing this text, you need to download the latest version of Flash Player here.

Welcome to the Guitar For Beginners & Beyond Forum, the fastest growing Guitar Community on the Internet.

You are currently viewing our site as a guest which limits your access to many of the great features available. By joining our free community you will gain access to over 100 free guitar lessons, be able to post topics, ask questions and communicate with other members (currently we have close to 80,000 guitar players from all over the World). By becoming a member, you will also be able to respond to polls, upload and get feedback on your playing and access many other special features... Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so why not join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Guitar Gear The place to discuss guitars, amps, effects, gear in general.

Forum Home > Guitar For Beginners & Beyond General Forum > Guitar Gear > Clueless When It Comes To Amps?!


Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
  #1  
Old May 14th, 2008
denyyourmaker denyyourmaker is offline
Newcomer

Playing guitar for less than a year.
 
Join Date: May 2008
Last Online: June 4th, 2008 06:59 PM
Location: London ON
Posts: 3
Clueless When It Comes To Amps?!

Hi

Ive just picked up the guitar again after 3 years of not playing. I played for 10 years previous to that.

Thing is, a lot has changed since then and i can now afford better gear. Not top line, but better than previously.

I bought an Ibanez RG2EX1 and put a set of EMG 81/85s in it. Sounds much better, but not as good as it did in the shop! So i reckon its my amp (crappy little Dean Markley practice amp).

So what i want to know is, what kind of amp to look at? I play predominantly Metal. Im in a Metal covers band and have shows coming up from July. So it needs to be loud.
What's the difference between tube and valve? Does the cab need to match the head? What difference do the speakers make? (ive been advised to look for Celestion?) Are ALL Marshall stacks/half stacks good quality?
Ive been looking at various ones but want to get some advise before shelling out. My budget is $500-$800ish.

Many thanks in advance!!!

Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old May 15th, 2008
JREC JREC is offline
Member

Playing guitar for over a year.
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Last Online: 3 Weeks Ago 11:18 AM
Location: Memphis/Knoxville, TN
Posts: 66


Tube and Valve are the North American and British name for the same thing. Tubes are generally more "vintage" sounding than solid state, though IMO with either type and the right pups/fx you can get pretty close to any sound you're going for. Sadly I'm not into metal so I'm not really sure what the best bet for you would be--Marshalls generally are both very loud and good quality, though you're paying a lot for the name and could get an amp that sounds just as good but with a different name on it for a lot cheaper...just my opinion of course

Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old May 17th, 2008
Noodler Noodler is offline
Full Member

Playing guitar for over 10 years.
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Last Online: 23 Hours Ago 08:42 PM
Location: Australia
Posts: 679


Since replies seem slow and you may be in a hurry, I'll give you some clues you might want to look into about your stack to help you research.

You don't have to run a Marshall speaker box with your head, but you do need to check the ohm rating (impedence) of the speaker cab. Too low an impedence can blow your amp, because it expects more resistance. Running a tube amp without a speaker attached (ie no load) will blow it immediately. Check this, but I think you are OK to run a box with a higher impedence than your amp expects. So if your amp has an 8 ohm out, I think a 16 ohm cab is OK, but a 4 ohm isn't. Can someone verify that?

With speakers you get what you pay for as a rule. Better speakers are more expensive, plain and simple. So you often see two models of the same amp, but one with upgraded speakers. Yes, Celestion are classics. Other words you'll hear in the "good" department are Jensen, Greenback (a type of Celestion), Alnico Blue (also Celestion). Yes, your average Marshall quad box will have Celestions.
Here's a good summary link:

Retro Sound Amp Co.

The main thing about speakers, to me anyway, is their size. A 12" moves a lot of air. You'll feel those babies. You just need to make sure you get 10" or preferably 12" speakers. 8" is for practice, 15" is for bass alone.

No, not all Marshall stacks are good quality. We all kind of grew up with them at their peak I reckon. But there is so much different opinion. Check out Harmony Central for frank, often brutal reviews of gear. eg Did you know that they make solid state half-stacks? I'm not saying there's anything wrong with them, just that I'll bet they're not what you were thinking of!
Harmony Central®: Marshall Offers Limited Edition 100W MG Half Stack


Quote:
Marshalls generally are both very loud and good quality, though you're paying a lot for the name and could get an amp that sounds just as good but with a different name on it for a lot cheaper...just my opinion of course
I agree with this. If I was going for a Marshall half-stack, I'd expect to do a lot of research and spend a lot more than you have budgeted for.

I'll be very interested to see what others reckon on this one.

Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old May 17th, 2008
Stratrat's Avatar
Stratrat Stratrat is online now
Grand Member
donating member

Playing guitar for over a year.
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Last Online: 2 Hours Ago 05:28 PM
Location: Southern CA, USA
Posts: 3,321


I haven't pitched in because I don't play metal and don't know enough about the hi-gain amps (especially in the budget region) to contribute much. I know that Soldano and the EVH 5150 amps (I think Fender's making them now) are renowned high-gainers, as are Krank - but all those are outside the OP's budget. About the only suggestion I could come up with would be the Vox AD50VTX - it's a modeler that's patterned after more high-gain amps than the original AD50VT.

Personally, I'd stay away from solid-state Marshalls. I haven't played one but I've heard plenty of them being played (evvv-err-yyy time I go into a GC!), and I can't say I'm impressed with the tone at all (again - YMMV, as I'm not a metal player). Most of the reviews I've read say the same type of things about them. To get that "classic" Marshall sound, you'd be looking at their tube (valve) heads, which are considerably higher on the food chain price-wise!

Speakers are such a deep subject that one could almost write a book about them. There are many varieties made by many manufacturers, and lots of them have different sounds - aimed more at the "British" sound, or the "American" sound, or whatever. Speaker efficiency ratings can make a huge difference in how loud an amp is - a 102 dB rated speaker is much more efficient than one rated 97dB, and can make more (apparent) difference than doubling your amp's wattage! For example, the Eminence Tonker (rated 102 dB) is considered by many guys as being a brutally loud speaker. Some have tried them in their amps and discovered that they were too efficient, as it made the amp too loud to play in the "sweet spot" without blowing everybody's ears out.


Mac

"I wish I could play that fast - then I would have the option of not doing that."
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old May 18th, 2008
Noodler Noodler is offline
Full Member

Playing guitar for over 10 years.
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Last Online: 23 Hours Ago 08:42 PM
Location: Australia
Posts: 679


I've never heard anyone say anything bad about the Vox Valvetronix, and from memory, the 50W AD50VT has an upgraded speaker too.

Here's a video demo of the XL (high-gain) version stratrat is talking about:

YouTube - video review vox valvetronix advt-xl amp rob math

I actually like the normal one better, even for metal:

Vox Valvetronix AD30VT | Gearwire

YouTube - Vox AD50VT US HiGain

Sersly, at your price-range you might be better off looking for something like the Vox, or even a Line 6, Bugera (which is real valve), etc. Nothing wrong with wanting a classic Marshall half-stack, but you'd be looking at I think 3-4 times what you want to pay. People want the good models, so even old beaten-up ones are similar in price to brand new ones (check e-bay).

Here's what I think you were after. Hold your breath before looking at the price, and remember, this is just the head, no speakers:

Buy Marshall Vintage Modern 2466 Tube Amp Head online at Musician's Friend

Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old May 18th, 2008
Stratrat's Avatar
Stratrat Stratrat is online now
Grand Member
donating member

Playing guitar for over a year.
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Last Online: 2 Hours Ago 05:28 PM
Location: Southern CA, USA
Posts: 3,321


Quote:
Originally Posted by Noodler View Post
...Sersly, at your price-range you might be better off looking for something like the Vox, or even a Line 6, Bugera (which is real valve), etc...
Just keep in mind that Bugera is made by Behringer (for whatever that's worth).


Mac

"I wish I could play that fast - then I would have the option of not doing that."
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old May 19th, 2008
JessThrasher's Avatar
JessThrasher JessThrasher is offline
Grand Member

Playing guitar for over a year.
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Last Online: 18 Hours Ago 01:05 AM
Location: The great north (Canada)
Posts: 1,172
Send a message via MSN to JessThrasher Send a message via Skype™ to JessThrasher


I have a thread on buying amps. Theres lots of useful information. Check it out!


"If we built a ride everyone wanted to ride, that's called an elevator - and that's not an amusement ride." - Stan Checketts, S&S Power
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old May 20th, 2008
Noodler Noodler is offline
Full Member

Playing guitar for over 10 years.
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Last Online: 23 Hours Ago 08:42 PM
Location: Australia
Posts: 679


Link hermanli? Sheesh.

Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old May 20th, 2008
JessThrasher's Avatar
JessThrasher JessThrasher is offline
Grand Member

Playing guitar for over a year.
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Last Online: 18 Hours Ago 01:05 AM
Location: The great north (Canada)
Posts: 1,172
Send a message via MSN to JessThrasher Send a message via Skype™ to JessThrasher


http://www.guitarforbeginners.com/fo...guide-jessica/


"If we built a ride everyone wanted to ride, that's called an elevator - and that's not an amusement ride." - Stan Checketts, S&S Power
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old May 21st, 2008
Noodler Noodler is offline
Full Member

Playing guitar for over 10 years.
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Last Online: 23 Hours Ago 08:42 PM
Location: Australia
Posts: 679


Thankyou, come again.


hey I used to struggle to write your name, but now I get it! Herman Li, the Ibanez Shredder from Dragonforce.

I'll check out the link.

Interesting that Orange's Tiny Terror has heaps of gain, but doesn't do metal. So metal isn't all about gain. I'll be interested in what you've got to say.

Reply With Quote
  #11  
Old May 24th, 2008
79Lespaul's Avatar
79Lespaul 79Lespaul is offline
Member

Playing guitar for over 10 years.
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Last Online: 3 Weeks Ago 04:20 PM
Location: Charlotte,North Carolina USA
Posts: 172


NoBrainer Decision...Marshall Head and Cabinate!


Ob-La-Di , Ob-La-Da , Life Goes On !, La La La La Life Goes On! The Beatles
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old May 24th, 2008
Noodler Noodler is offline
Full Member

Playing guitar for over 10 years.
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Last Online: 23 Hours Ago 08:42 PM
Location: Australia
Posts: 679


79 LesPaul, quote from the OP, mate:

Quote:
My budget is $500-$800ish.

Reply With Quote
  #13  
Old May 25th, 2008
Stratrat's Avatar
Stratrat Stratrat is online now
Grand Member
donating member

Playing guitar for over a year.
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Last Online: 2 Hours Ago 05:28 PM
Location: Southern CA, USA
Posts: 3,321


Huh? From what little I've heard, the Orange Tiny Terror is a fairly high-gain amp....why wouldn't it do metal? ANY amp will do metal with the right pedal in front of it.

I tend toward clean(ish) amps, and use pedals to get more dirt. Unless you're a full-on, 100% of the time drowned-in-distortion metalhead, that's the way to go IMO. You can add dirt to a clean amp, but you can't add clean to a dirty (i.e. ultra-high gain) amp.


Mac

"I wish I could play that fast - then I would have the option of not doing that."
Reply With Quote
  #14  
Old May 26th, 2008
Noodler Noodler is offline
Full Member

Playing guitar for over 10 years.
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Last Online: 23 Hours Ago 08:42 PM
Location: Australia
Posts: 679


YouTube - Orange Tiny Terror Metal

You can make up your own mind, but even with Chappers playing it, it still would not be my first choice for metal, and it can't do clean at high volume. It's designed to do one thing well.

Quote:
I tend toward clean(ish) amps, and use pedals to get more dirt. Unless you're a full-on, 100% of the time drowned-in-distortion metalhead, that's the way to go IMO. You can add dirt to a clean amp, but you can't add clean to a dirty (i.e. ultra-high gain) amp.
From what I'm finding out, this isn't always right. For instance metal amps have speakers that sit better with distortion. The Eminences in a Fender Hotrod Deluxe just won't suit that style as well as others. Also the 6L6's in Fenders also don't like distortion very much, even if it comes from pedals. I think there is a place for high-gain genre-specific amps, and that for metal-only that can mean solid state.

The Tiny Terror is a sweet amp, but not for metal, nor for 60's surf rock, IMHO. But what I do agree with is using pedals to get the sound, and as such you don't necessarily need valves. I have gotten fully authentic metal tones to die for out of practice amps with pedals.

Reply With Quote
  #15  
Old May 29th, 2008
Noodler Noodler is offline
Full Member

Playing guitar for over 10 years.
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Last Online: 23 Hours Ago 08:42 PM
Location: Australia
Posts: 679


Most heads I'm seeing have switchable impedences to match different cabs. eg Switchable 8 or 16 ohm.

denyyourmaker, have you been shopping?

Reply With Quote
Reply

Forum Home > Guitar For Beginners & Beyond General Forum > Guitar Gear > Clueless When It Comes To Amps?!


The GfB&B Guitar Slide Rule

Download the PDF of the 'Guitar Chord Slide Rule', print it out, fold it together and you'll have at your disposal a very neat tool that will not only show you all the positions for the main flavors of chords, but will also teach you a very important lesson about how the guitar works... It consists of a folded sleeve and six double sided inserts, instructions for cutting it out and folding it together are included with the PDF ... it's very simple to do, and if you botch it, you can simply print it out again!

Buy it now for only $10

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:46 PM.

 



Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.0.0 ©2007, Crawlability, Inc.