Have you ever opened a Line 6 amp? Everything about it screams "CHEAP" from the thin PCB to the board-mounted pots and jacks. I'm not saying that tube amps are automatically better; Peaveys and Crates look pretty similar under the hood, and have similar reputations for poor reliability. It's more accurate to say that some things are built to last while others aren't, and most modelers fall into the latter category.
My laptop gets hot, but it doesn't have any tubes. Maybe there are other electronic components that give off heat as well, like CPUs or power amp transistors... [emoji38]
I think this says more about general build quality than it does about specific maintenance. Line 6 knows that modelers become obsolete pretty quickly in the grand scheme of things, so they don't bother building them to last. Their products are also designed to hit a specific price point.
On the other end of the scale I heard of a Soldano SLO owned by a studio in the UK. The studio flooded and the amp spent 2 weeks underwater, but after drying it out they fired it up and it still worked. The pots weren't even scratchy because SLOs are designed to be bullet-proof, and you pay for that.
So we're comparing cheap modelers to expensive tube amps? Why not the modelers that actually show what the technology can do? If we're talking about which technology is better, we have to compare the best: we should be talking Helix and not Spyder or pocket pod.
Again, he's trying to push one example of a broken cheap amp onto the entirety of digital technology. It's an absurd strawman.
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High end modelers like a Helix, Kemper, or AxeFx are built like a computer because that's essentially what they are. Compared to a Spyder or Pocket POD the PCBs are heavier and the pots and other components are better quality, but they're still not in the same league as the "expensive tube amp". Amps like the SLO and many vintage tube amps were designed and built to last for decades while most amps built recently aren't.
I haven't tried a Helix, and I didn't care for the Kemper I tried, but I thought the AxeFx was awesome. The main reason I don't own one is because they're really expensive. The second reason is that I can get my Marshall serviced if something goes wrong, whereas a broken AxeFx makes a great (and very expensive) door stop.
Actually, if they would have been built like computers, you could switch standardized parts in them, easily re-install and retrofit software, upgrade and such. Then they would last.
But they are not.
They're proprietary computers. My remark refers more to how the hardware is constructed, not the software they run.
the SLO is a great amp but i think the older amps are a better example of lasting. there are plenty of 50's fender amps out there still running strong with a minimal amount of upkeep
The most expensive part on an fractal pcb board is the processor, if it fails or the board fails, you ship the unit back to them for repairs. They replace the board or the processor, its no longer a door step. Would you keep a amp as a huge door step because the transformer failed?High end modelers like a Helix, Kemper, or AxeFx are built like a computer because that's essentially what they are. Compared to a Spyder or Pocket POD the PCBs are heavier and the pots and other components are better quality, but they're still not in the same league as the "expensive tube amp". Amps like the SLO and many vintage tube amps were designed and built to last for decades while most amps built recently aren't.
I haven't tried a Helix, and I didn't care for the Kemper I tried, but I thought the AxeFx was awesome. The main reason I don't own one is because they're really expensive. The second reason is that I can get my Marshall serviced if something goes wrong, whereas a broken AxeFx makes a great (and very expensive) door stop.
The most expensive part on an fractal pcb board is the processor, if it fails or the board fails, you ship the unit back to them for repairs. They replace the board or the processor, its no longer a door step. Would you keep a amp as a huge door step because the transformer failed?
Why would you eat a tofu steak that tastes 'identical' to beef when an actual steak is freely available in the next aisle?
When digital modelling/solid state breaks away from cloning old voxes, fenders & marshalls & do something 'new' then they may bring value to the table.
My opinion is why would I spend thousands on a kemper rig when I can get an ac15 and/or deluxe reverb at a similar price point, & like many have pointed out they don't become obselete & will always sound like a vox or fender
The only worry is actual valves may go out of production or become unavailable one day but I don't see that happening in my lifetime
Why? Because you get 100 amps + cabs + pedals for the price of one tube amp.
Several modelers include amp models that don't exist in the real world, it's just not a marketing point because most people buy gear to imitate someone else's tone, tube players included.
If all you want is one amp and you don't care about easy recording or low volume practicing, by all means a tube amp is the easiest way to get what you want. But comparing modeling amps to tofu is just a lame attempt to sound tough.
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This entire thread is sacrilegious....
Tubes are king!!!
Plus somehow I don’t see kids two generations down the line still getting excited about a Helix the way younger people are still digging vintage Fender’s, Marshall’s, Etc. today???
Maybe though, I’m sure Leo wasn’t thinking that people would be spending thousands of dollars for, & still playing through, his early 1950’s & 1960’s circuits nearly 70 years later?
Why? Because you get 100 amps + cabs + pedals for the price of one tube amp.
But comparing modeling amps to tofu is just a lame attempt to sound tough.
So buying steak/valve amp(s) is the easiest way to get what you want.If all you want is one amp and you don't care about easy recording or low volume practicing, by all means a tube amp is the easiest way to get what you want.
Who actually needs 100 amps + cabs + pedals? IMO for what I want you need a scooped BF type amp, a mid heavy Brit style amp couple of modulation pedals an OD, delay & wah, other genres may want another setup (jc120 & boogie for example) it's a cliche but tone is in the fingers, many albums (and indeed artists careers) have been achieved with as little as 1 to 3 amps. Of those 100+ amps 90% are going to be in the ball park of what I mentioned & the other 10% would not be usable to me aside from novelty value