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| Amp Central Station Amps, tubes, speakers & everything AMP related. |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Saratoga, NY
Age: 54
Posts: 405
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This may seem sacreligious but..
I own an SF Princeton. While I like the tone with my Strat, I find the tone is not what I want from my Tele. The tele is a 2003 America Custom Telecaster (the limited edition) with Nocaster pickups. I bought the guitar based on the sound of the bridge pickup. There is a sound I find in most Tele bridge pickups and it also a major tone in a p-90 that I do not like . It's a high midrange sound I don't like. I looked for a tele that had the least of this tone and found this one. When I was testing guitars i the store, I used a DRI as I knew a fender seems to bring out this tone and makes it easy to identify. When I play with my group, I use a Laney VC-30210 (30 watts 2 10's all tube) and this amp does accentuate the unwanted tone. It is said the amp is Vox sounding.
I love the volume and most of the tone I get from the SF Princeton, But the high mid thing with the tele make me stay away from the bridge pickup that I love so much. Can I change out the speaker with something along with tube to get more british tone from the amp? I was thinking a Weber Blue Pup and perhaps some different tubes. I don't want to hack the amp. Anything I find today with the tone I am looking for is usually not a good quality amp and not easliy serviced. Does anyone have any suggestions? |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 0
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Maybe not the amp?
I'm going to ask a silly question, and please forgive me if this is all old news to you... but are you familiar with the whole "sweet spot" idea with Telecasters? The idea is to <u>roll the tone control back</u> on the guitar just until the "ice-pick in the ear" quality disappears.
Lots of folks who've mainly played Strats are accustomed to keeping the tone control wide open, and on most Teles, that's too much treble – or too much for my ears, anyway. ;-) Do a search on "sweet spot" here and you'll find the subject discussed at length. It was a real revelation to me when someone finally gave me "permission" to use the tone control. ;-) Just a guess. Hope it helps, CS :-) |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 142
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The tone control on a Tele is much more powerful than it is on any other guitar, IMHO. I agree.
That said, if that doesn't do the trick for you, there is nothing wrong with looking into a different speaker. I'm not sure I'd go with a British-type speaker, but I would suggest a Weber 10A125 or 10A150 series alnico speaker, but you would want to talk to Ted at Weber to get his opinion on the exact flavor. He's very helpful. |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Saratoga, NY
Age: 54
Posts: 405
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Yep, I do know about the tone control and have been given permission to use it ;) I find that this frenquency is not high treble that is controlled by the tone control. This guitar dosen't "ice pick" to my ears, It's a bit lower in the frenquency range. It's more of a very high midrange metallic tone like a tin horn for lack of a better description. The guitar that does this the most is my 76 Gibson Les Paul Special (p-90's) on the bridge pickup.
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