Re: 5150 Three
this ones made by fender, not peavey
Yes, and too bad Bruce Zinky didn't have a little hands on development of the circuit. It would be even more MONSTROUS than it probably already is. Fender has pretty much always had good amps, but he sure honed in some of their more contemporary designs. Regardless, I'm sure Fender did extremely well on piecing together this venture. The specs say, "Custom made transformers and special biasing help achieve Edward's fabled Variable AC effect." I wonder if that is similar to the Metroamp virtual variac on one of their models?
I def don't need a new amp, and especially not another main amp. But I'm still pretty interested to see how this one pans out. If it's point-to-point, or pcb, or a little of both? Fender does make some tough amps, no doubt. I had an early
5150 when they came out, I didn't keep it too long, but it was made well. Anyways I wasn't out to use or come near copping a VH type tone. I was tired of Marshall's in general, it was everyone's staple. Mostly I was just impressed with Ed's input, cause the man knows good tone, it's inherent to himself as a whole. Now, take that EVH insignia off, and that will look like an even better amp. Too bad they just recently came out with the Blonde
Super Sonic, cause that would be a prime tolex for this contraption. With 3 individual channels and independent eq's for each, I'm sure this will have some luscious vintage flavour in it somewhere. Oh yeah, don't forget the infamous Fender 'Clean' sound that is bound to be found within it too.
Wickedly Tough, 'microwave' may be right, I bet it "cooks"...
ps. Who needs reverb when you're sizzling heat on large irons cranked?