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| Amp Central Station Amps, tubes, speakers & everything AMP related. |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
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Yep
I have a 74 Pro which is a 40W model, and a 69 Vibrolux. Both have Weber Vintage Ceramic speakers in the appropriate size. I mostly play 40s-50s style jazz and do not work the amps that hard so I'm not sure how helpful my comments will be.
The Vibrolux has a more 'focussed' sound whereas the Pro tends to 'bloom' with a big warm tone. The Vibrolux tends to break up a bit earlier - around 4 or 5 whereas the Pro tends to stay the same. I tend to favour the Pro for gigs, however my former jazz teacher, who played fusion style and needed to borrow an amp on occasion, preferred the Vibrolux. Speakers make a big difference. I tried the Vibrolux with Jensen P10R reissues and it sounded really bright and dirty. I also tried Weber Californias in the Pro and it sounded too bright - although clean. The Pro is about 10lbs heavier than the Vibrolux.
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RN |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Poster Extraordinaire
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I think they love humbuckers too :-)
A well-tuned Pro Reverb is a beautiful thing, but don't expect it to break up much for you. I've pushed mine pretty hard and mostly it just gets louder. A good overdrive pedal can make it a very versatile rig, though. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: The Gorge
Posts: 2,198
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I have a 74 and at the $450 I paid, I doubt it is 3 times the amp your '77 is ;~) I really like it a lot. It is the 40 watter tube rectifier model. Breaks up nicely to my ear but not until it is pretty darned loud. Currently it's running at 4 ohm with a pair of ancient Altec 417's. I'm keeping the treble under control and the bass up high and it sounds great! I'm puling out the Altecs and building up a Fender 2x12 clone cab for them and the stock Fender's will go back in for a while.
That Pro also makes a great sounding bass amp. I often disconnect the internal speakers and plug in an 8 ohm JBL 15 in a TL box... What a fabulous tone! It just oozes and drips thickness... These are great amps - snag one while the value is still reasonable. |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 214
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And reasonable would be???
I'm looking at a '68 in about 8 of 10 cosmetic condition. Here it is:
The owner doesn't have a footswitch. I'd take it with the original speakers but I'd like to spend a lot less. TT |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
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I think they're great amps..
I had a '73 for several years. Like others have said, it's a cleaner, rounder tone than the VR. I think of it more as a half-powered twin. Over-simplification, but it kinda says it all.
The only reason I unloaded it was because they're a big combo. 2x12, heavy, and really, more amp than I need at most of my gigs. I sold it in order to buy a Holland Lil Jimi, which is a 1x12 combo, but more like a Super Reverb in power and break-up. Still a bit too much power for most of the small places we play, but it's at least much more compact. Classic Fender clean. The circuits can be blackfaced which may make it break up a bit earlier than stock SF circuits. And like Robin said, the right speakers can really make the amp. |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Poster Extraordinaire
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FWIW, my Pro is actually a '67 BF model, and it really doesn't break up that much more than the SF models even after doing a couple of things to maximze breakup, including installing some good alnico speakers.
And that price on the ebay auction doesn't seem like a bad price. I bought mine for $1250 about 4 years ago, and even then a '68 was going for around $700. A late SF one was around $450 or so. I saw a '66 listed at a local shop for $2k last week, and it'll probably sell for something real close to that. |
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#11 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Flushing, Michigan
Posts: 4,631
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That looked like a nice 68. It's been BF'd, which is a plus. It looks like it's been recently serviced too, so you shouldn't have to take it in to a tech immediately after getting it. At $850, I'd say that it was a pretty good deal.
I paid $800, or $850 for my 73 several months ago. It hadn't been serviced at all, and it's original Oxford speakers were shot. I put in some Celestion G12H-80's, and bought a Weber MASS. The amp full up, with the MASS is a WONDERFUL thing! There's just enough crunch going on to let me keep all my extra toys in the gig bag.
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Timothy Jon Lamb |
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#12 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
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One nice thing about the late 70's Pro Reverbs is that they already have a Master Volume control. I know most folks aren't fans of such things, but I get a warmer sound turning the Master down to 2-3 and the Volume to 6-7. Sounds better to me than having the Master at 10 and the Volume at 2-3.
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#13 (permalink) |
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TDPRI Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Pa.
Posts: 46
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I've got a '66
and I think it is superb w/ a Tele or Strat. I've installed a pair of Alltone 1250's in place of the old, tired Oxfords. This increased efficiency (somewhat LOUDer), but also increased snap,snarl, n' spit. It loves stompboxes and frankly, just sounds KILLER!
Jimbo |
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