Re: Vox Valvetronix Video & Appreciation Thread
ah, well that's what I was talking about! a 50-ish watter with an extension cab capability. i didn't know about the different "X" line with the ohms switch. look like I may be finding my current ideal amp.
Yeah, I love it. Stratdeluxer97 and a few others like Jumpmarine and Gearjoneser really steered me in the direction of the Valvetronix and personally, I just clicked with the amp. I can get picky so there's a few sounds I don't like, but there sure are a lot that I do. The ohms switch is freaking great. It starts at 1 or five, I forget which, then 15,30,60. This one doesn't cut off the internal combo speaker, but the ohms are added together instead of cut in half. In other words, it's an internal 8 ohm speaker. I hooked it up to an 8 ohm cab, so you set the ohms to 16 on the amp.
I also have a Line 6 Vetta, and while they are similar in that they have different amp models and effects, I think they are really two different animals that do different things better. IMHO, the Vetta's chorus is much better. Just my taste. The Vetta is way louder, if that's what you need BUT needs to be pretty loud to really sound good. Not the Vox. Granted, it sounds better loud, but still sounds good on quite a few patches on low volume. The Line 6 I feel sounds better at metal and death metal patches, and clean patches with lotsa effects like chorus, pitch shifter, reverb, delay. The Vox does Vox and Fender cleans REALLY well and I got it to clone my 65 Champ about 90% side by side. Funny, but the patch I had to use to do that was the 410, Bassman, not the Champ model :laugh2:
I can't speak for the metal grill series as I've never owned one, but a Vox representative emailed me and said the electronics are the same in the metal and blue grill amps. The cabs are different. The blue cloth grill combo really opens up with an extension cabinet as well. However, all by itself I used it at band practice a few times. We play in a tiny all cinderblock room and the other guys have the Marshall MG amps and the Vetta is like a giant among children there. I've gotta play really low because it cuts through so well. We were playing Heaven and Hell by Sabbath, and I sing, so for one take I didn't play guitar. It sounded dull. On the next try I played and wow did it sound different. Had my SG with the Brobucker pickup and the Vox set on either US high gain or British modern. No extension cab and it just ruled. The amp mixes so well with other instraments and for recording I would suggest not only playing it alone, but if you can, try it while recording or rehearsing.
Vox Valvetronix :bowdown: