Luke Duke
PRSlustologist
Re: I've come to the conclusion that the Celestion Vintage 30 is......
Beat me to it!
The late 70s and early 80s cabs had G1265s in them which is more akin to a greenback with the smaller magnet, but it had/has a large dustcap. It holds together under gain better than a greenback, but still gives you that classic type of sound. Celestion also did some runs of G1280s which were the predecessors to the Modern Lead, and the V30. They were in the Marshall 1982 (bass/heavy duty) cabs. That's what my cab came with. I prefer V30s to them, because the 80s are more similiar to the Classic Lead (IMO). They also used the large dustcap.
Like LPB said and it says on the Celestion site the V30 came about because materials became available so they could make a voice coil much closer to the original Blue's.
Another speaker thing to point out. The old Pre-Rola and early Rolas used 75 and 55 Hz cones. Originally the G12H30 with a 55Hz cone was the bass speaker. Celestion over time also made greenbacks with the 55Hz cone and G12Hs with the 75hz cone. The regular greenback and the regular G12H now both come with a 75Hz cone. The Heritage G12H30 has the 55Hz or bass cone. Due to such changes that's why you can hear different greenbacks that have the same 40 years of use. Also that's one of the things that people go to Jim at Southbay Amp Works for.
I'm sure that was a lot of rambling, but hopefully it helped someone.
Luke
Most likely the 15 ohm speakers are not V30's, but original G12H30's if it says it's a 30 watt speaker. AFAIK, the 15 ohm designation was used way back in the 60's and early 70's, and it's been 16 ohms ever since.
The Vintage30 came out in the mid 80's as an ceramic alternative to a G12 alnico. It was designed to mimic the cone response of the 60's Celestion alnicos, but use a less expensive ceramic magnet, and handle way more power.
A lot of confusion is caused by the name, because it's not a version of the 30 watt speakers of old. It only uses the same cone and magnet as the old bass version of the G12H30. The Vintage 30 it's actually a 60 watt speaker, with the same voice coil assembly design as a G12 alnico.
Beat me to it!
The late 70s and early 80s cabs had G1265s in them which is more akin to a greenback with the smaller magnet, but it had/has a large dustcap. It holds together under gain better than a greenback, but still gives you that classic type of sound. Celestion also did some runs of G1280s which were the predecessors to the Modern Lead, and the V30. They were in the Marshall 1982 (bass/heavy duty) cabs. That's what my cab came with. I prefer V30s to them, because the 80s are more similiar to the Classic Lead (IMO). They also used the large dustcap.
Like LPB said and it says on the Celestion site the V30 came about because materials became available so they could make a voice coil much closer to the original Blue's.
Another speaker thing to point out. The old Pre-Rola and early Rolas used 75 and 55 Hz cones. Originally the G12H30 with a 55Hz cone was the bass speaker. Celestion over time also made greenbacks with the 55Hz cone and G12Hs with the 75hz cone. The regular greenback and the regular G12H now both come with a 75Hz cone. The Heritage G12H30 has the 55Hz or bass cone. Due to such changes that's why you can hear different greenbacks that have the same 40 years of use. Also that's one of the things that people go to Jim at Southbay Amp Works for.
I'm sure that was a lot of rambling, but hopefully it helped someone.
Luke
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