While the SLM ( Crates parent Company ) is a USA based company, many things were made in other countries. I don't believe mine was a USA-made amp. Mine was the second rendition of it with plain text ( not the splashed text of the original release ). The mirror in the back was literally a piece of mylar stapled to the back panel. The tube glow was just 6volt light bulbs with a rubber cover to give them the orange glow.
The parts inside the amp were of decent quality, but the pots were the cheap PCB mounted 16mm type that had press-on knobs. As for the heater issue I had, it appears to be a bad trace & cold solder all in one. I eventually had to hotwire it. It was good all the way up to the little bulbs, but somewhere between them and the tube, it was intermittent. The amplifier all-in-all was good but just didn't have " IT ". When I converted it to a more JCM-800 it was certainly more fun, but it just wasn't either of those amps at that point.
I came across a couple of others over the years and got to play them, and it just reaffirmed my reason for offloading it. They had a sound, it just wasn't the one I had in my head. Looking back on the amplifier circuit, I can say that it was an original enough design. SLM really tried to make something that was along the vein of a Mesa with cascaded gain stages biased hot and cold. The issue I think was the tone control was at the end of the circuit, which made it less functional. They used vactrols for channel switching which stole some tone I think. The amp was also very bright and noisy. To control the gain they had to use lots of interstage grid leaks and grid stoppers. And they used an especially small coupling cap ( a .001 ) between the first stage and the second stage to control the bass. The cascading gain was clever, but I think what led to the fizzy, bee's in a can sound, was using two stages in a row with fairly high plate resistor values. Most amps do cold, hot, cold, etc. for gain staging. The BV went cold, hot, hot, cold and the two hot stages in a row really brought the beans to the distortion factory. There was a vactrol on each side of the distortion channel, so there were two opportunities to rob tone with the things. Between the noise ( lots of hiss ) and less than stellar channel switching design, it just isn't a top-tier amp.
The parts inside the amp were of decent quality, but the pots were the cheap PCB mounted 16mm type that had press-on knobs. As for the heater issue I had, it appears to be a bad trace & cold solder all in one. I eventually had to hotwire it. It was good all the way up to the little bulbs, but somewhere between them and the tube, it was intermittent. The amplifier all-in-all was good but just didn't have " IT ". When I converted it to a more JCM-800 it was certainly more fun, but it just wasn't either of those amps at that point.
I came across a couple of others over the years and got to play them, and it just reaffirmed my reason for offloading it. They had a sound, it just wasn't the one I had in my head. Looking back on the amplifier circuit, I can say that it was an original enough design. SLM really tried to make something that was along the vein of a Mesa with cascaded gain stages biased hot and cold. The issue I think was the tone control was at the end of the circuit, which made it less functional. They used vactrols for channel switching which stole some tone I think. The amp was also very bright and noisy. To control the gain they had to use lots of interstage grid leaks and grid stoppers. And they used an especially small coupling cap ( a .001 ) between the first stage and the second stage to control the bass. The cascading gain was clever, but I think what led to the fizzy, bee's in a can sound, was using two stages in a row with fairly high plate resistor values. Most amps do cold, hot, cold, etc. for gain staging. The BV went cold, hot, hot, cold and the two hot stages in a row really brought the beans to the distortion factory. There was a vactrol on each side of the distortion channel, so there were two opportunities to rob tone with the things. Between the noise ( lots of hiss ) and less than stellar channel switching design, it just isn't a top-tier amp.