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Tele-Afflicted
Im looking to see how many tube amp peavey as.I have a classic 30 which is great there's also the classic 50 and delta blues, what other Peavey model amps as tube in them !!!
A few years ago I made a list of all the PV combos, tube, SS and hybrid.
All with specs and pictures
Here is a link:
http://forums.peavey.com/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=14659
Jonathan
Oh, goody! Keep hyping the Deuce. I just hacked the chassis outta mine, it's headed for eBay.
See, Black Widows don't age gracefully.
Some maniac with a drill did an Ultimate Hack Job installing casters.
Besides, I already robbed the 6L6s and used 'em in one of my Twins. Sold the footswitch. Yup, they're great amps.
I take it you're not gonna toss the speakers in the dumpster? Funny when I got the "BW" one a couple years back I looked in the back and the 6L6's had blueish green lettering on them that said Mesa STR 415 on them.
A few years ago I made a list of all the PV combos, tube, SS and hybrid.
All with specs and pictures
Here is a link:
http://forums.peavey.com/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=14659
Jonathan[/QUOTE
thanks Jonathan
I was able to open the link awsome research on Peavey amps now I know a lot more on peavey amps/tubes/ year's and all kind of info![]()
Peavey Deuce and Deuce VT
The “original” Peavey Deuce of the mid-1970s and follow-up model Deuce VT from late 70s and early 80s are real sleeper amps. They both use Four 6L6GC power tubes and output 120W. There are still many players who gig with these amps and they are known for their reliability. Players describe how they are built like a tank. They don't sound like a Fender or a Marshall. A real bonus is that these amps can be picked up very cheaply. Great bang for the buck! Like the Fender Twin, Deuces are over-powered, VERY LOUD and can blow the windows out of smaller venues. The Fender camp might consider the Deuce a mediocre amps, but they can kick many other amps arses. The only real negative is like Fender Twins, Deuces are very heavy.
A really remarkable Peavey customer support trait is that they often over the phone and email still support this 30+ year old equipment. There are a number of reports where Peavey has taken back old Deuces and sorted out issues a extremely low charges. Peavey technicians have even been reported to respond to issues within 24 hours and the company has been quick to send out schematics and manuals. Peavey is to be commended for such a high level of support on equipment out of warranty over 30 years.
A key point of long-time owners is that these amps are super reliable. One thing that should be pointed out is these things have HUGE transformers, so they should be able to run some serious speakers.
A unique Deuce feature is the ability to combine the Normal & Effects channel in parallel or in series. In parallel it runs both outputs to the power stage. In serial it runs through the Normal Channel and then loops through the Effect Channel, after which it feeds into the power amp. This results in large gain increases, but unfortunately drops the volume.
Deuces suit classic rock, southern rock, blues, reggae, brown sound and are not suitable for full on super high-gain heavy metal genres. This amp runs clean at the lower levels and the sonic signature goes towards warm as it is cranked up.
Peavey Deuces were big with large Southern rock groups, such as Lynrd Skynrd (for example on “One for the Road”) and 38 Special. David Knopfler when he was with Dire Straits used Peavey Deuce VT amps in 1978-79 timeframe.
Peavey Deuce and Peavey Deuce VT
Peavey Deuce (as per below)
Peavey Deuce VT was built from 1978 to the early eighties
...The Deuce VT differs from the Deuce by having Pre-Gain & Post-Gain on the Normal and Effects Channels. Also in place of the Deuces Tremolo is a Phaser with Colour and Rate controls. The single Master Gain was dropped. Speakers used in the Deuce VT series are Eminence Black Widows.
Models:
...212 (2 x 12” combo)
...410 (4 x 10” combo)
Power Tubes
...4 x RCA 6L6GC
Power Output
...120W @ 4 ohms
...120W @ 2 ohms
...90W @ 8 ohms
Frequency Response
...40 Hz to 25000 Hz (3 dB down at each end)
Transformers
...Custom Over-size Schumacher Power (Mains) and Output Transformers
Pre-amp
...Solid-state
Channels
...2
......Normal Channel
......Effects Channel
Inputs
...4 (Hi/Lo for each channel)
...Footswitch operated Normal & Effect Channel Combiner
......Parallel Combiner Mode
Sends input signal through both channels in parallel
In this mode “all controls” are active on the sonic tone
......Serial Combiner Mode
.........Sends signal through Normal Channel and then through Effect Channel
............Adds large amount of gain stages used to create sustain & overdrive
............With Master gain control Power Tube overdrive can be trigged at various volume levels
Switches
...Power (3-way On – Off – On with Ground Lift)
......Pilot light on front
...Standby
Controls
...Effect Channel Controls
......Gain (Pre-amp sensitivity – not volume)
......Treble (+/- 20 dB @ 5 kHz)
......Mid-range (+/- 10 dB @ 300 Hz)
......Bass (+/- 10 dB @ 50 Hz)
......Tremolo Depth
......Tremolo Rate
...Normal Channel Controls
......Gain (Pre-amp sensitivity – not volume)
......Mid-level (+/- 10 dB @ 300 Hz)
......Bass (+/- 10 dB @ 50 Hz)
...Shared Controls
......Reverb Blend (controls amount of reverb blended into output)
......Master Gain (After Pre-amp Section and before Power Tube Section)
Speaker Jacks
...2
...Internal (switched) – 4 ohms
...External – 4 ohms
Footswitch Jack (DIN connector)
...Footswitch
......Reverb
......Tremolo
......Channel Select
......Combiner (both channels active @ once)
Pictures below - Top to Bottom: (1) Peavey Deuce, (2) Peavey Deuce VT and (3) Peavey Deuce VT Head.
I think one of the BWs is "good", the other one has a dented up dustcap. The dustcap is also the voice coil former.
It's just a big ol' hog of an amp and worth more in pieces than it is whole IMO.
I think mine may have had Mesa tubes in it, too. Keepin' track of which tubes are in which amp over here is like countin' chickens...
It was one of those days when the stars aligned. I had just picked up a Twin w/ JBLs that had the usual mismatched tubes. I think one even had the requisite broken center lug. Next thing I know this Peavey shows up with a nice set of tubes. I figure the Fender needs the tubes more than the Peavey.![]()
Never had a deuce or a Mace but If they are like other Peavey amps of that period certainly nothing wrong with them.
Gosh I'm sure you'd prefer a good set of the BW's over the JBL's.......I'd be happy to swap you-I'll even throw in a pack of strings and a box of bubble gum too!![]()
Having problems opening it Windows wants to know what program you used so it can be opened?