This one is easy. My Peavey JSX 212. Primarily because it offers every tone I have ever relied on.
The Clean channel has my favorite clean tone - the Triple XXX clean. It has a huge, flat freq response, clean with all kinds of headroom. A lot like having a JC 120 hiding behind Channel #1.
I went through a period in the 90's where I was playing a Classic 50. The C50 covered all the Hard Rock, and with a Custom or Distortion loaded guitar, also the Metal tones I needed. Well, Joe asked James Brown to modify the Triple XXX Crunch channel to be close to a C50 Lead Channel. So Crunch is like having a C50 behind Channel #2.
Which brings me to the Ultra channel.. Basically a Triple XXX Ultra channel, which was always more gain than I ever needed. It is not the 6505 or Bogner or Mesa liquid gain level, but I never get much beyond 80's Metal and it can handle any Rock or Hard Rock up through today, for any practical band mix. If I am sitting at home and want that massive gain, I just plug into my VIP 3.
Bells and whistles include a EL34 or 6L6 capabilities, 60W/120W switch, noise gate, Fat tone switches for the Crunch and Ultra channels, Presence & Resonance controls, a Line Out with Level control and an actual Accutronics reverb tank in the bottom. I can plug a 412 into the external cabinet jack to move more air, or easily unplug the internal speakers and go full stack for show.
The only negative for me is, it weighs about as much as a battleship.
So when it is stationary, it is the one that rocks my world.
...and before you say nay, The JSX did evolve from a Triple XXX.
This one is easy. My Peavey JSX 212. Primarily because it offers every tone I have ever relied on.
The Clean channel has my favorite clean tone - the Triple XXX clean. It has a huge, flat freq response, clean with all kinds of headroom. A lot like having a JC 120 hiding behind Channel #1.
I went through a period in the 90's where I was playing a Classic 50. The C50 covered all the Hard Rock, and with a Custom or Distortion loaded guitar, also the Metal tones I needed. Well, Joe asked James Brown to modify the Triple XXX Crunch channel to be close to a C50 Lead Channel. So Crunch is like having a C50 behind Channel #2.
Which brings me to the Ultra channel.. Basically a Triple XXX Ultra channel, which was always more gain than I ever needed. It is not the 6505 or Bogner or Mesa liquid gain level, but I never get much beyond 80's Metal and it can handle any Rock or Hard Rock up through today, for any practical band mix. If I am sitting at home and want that massive gain, I just plug into my VIP 3.
Bells and whistles include a EL34 or 6L6 capabilities, 60W/120W switch, noise gate, Fat tone switches for the Crunch and Ultra channels, Presence & Resonance controls, a Line Out with Level control and an actual Accutronics reverb tank in the bottom. I can plug a 412 into the external cabinet jack to move more air, or easily unplug the internal speakers and go full stack for show.
The only negative for me is, it weighs about as much as a battleship.
So when it is stationary, it is the one that rocks my world.
...and before you say nay, The JSX did evolve from a Triple XXX.
I have Triple X 212 that I threw V30s in, it's a great amp. I got it before the JSX came out, and they are very similar. The JSX had some nice features over the Triple X, but not enough to justify swapping.
The Triple X was project for a George Lynch signature amp that fell through. Definate sleeper, and YES, they weigh a ton!!!
XXX/JSX are unsung hero amps.
I used to have a XXX, and gotta say, they are severely underrated. They're voiced in such a way where everything just falls into place just as long as you don't go crazy on the settings since the EQ is active. They did have a lot of "quirks", but they're very gratifying amps if you know how to dial them in... which is not all that difficult, to be honest, if you keep the EQ settings reasonable and the gain knob set conservatively as they did have ridiculous amounts of (almost unusable) gain on both distorted channels.I have Triple X 212 that I threw V30s in, it's a great amp. I got it before the JSX came out, and they are very similar. The JSX had some nice features over the Triple X, but not enough to justify swapping.
The Triple X was project for a George Lynch signature amp that fell through. Definate sleeper, and YES, they weigh a ton!!!
XXX/JSX are unsung hero amps.