L
Lewguitar
Guest
A couple of months ago my brother Bruce found me a killer Fender silverface Princeton Reverb amp. Bruce recapped it, changed the tone caps in the preamp for more of a plexi Marshall tone, and put a Weber VST C10N/Q speaker in the amp.
Killer, growly, deep, full and surprisingly loud and expressive tone! I just love it.
This amp, along with my modded blackface Deluxe Reverbs, has become my main amp.
I love it so much I bought another one - this time a '66 blackface Princeton Reverb. The amp came with new tubes and had recently been recapped by a tech other than Bruce...but it was ready to go.
The seller had replaced the original Jensen speaker with a cheap Italian made reissue Jensen C10Q. I like, but don't love the Jensen reissue C10Q, finding them a little to brittle on top, even after being broken in. I've owned a few, all of them given to me by players who didn't like them either! (laugh!)
So when I plugged my guitar into this blackface Princeton Reverb I wasn't surprised that the tone was thinner and brighter and less inspiring than my silverface version of the same amp with the Weber C10N/Q.
But I was surprised and HOW MUCH thinner and brighter and less inspiring the tone was! The blackface amp sounds about 2/3 as loud and not nearly as full and deep. To be honest, it sucked! (I don't like to use that word but it's how I felt...and what came to mind!)
So I un-plugged the reissue Jensen in the blackface PR and plugged the blackface PR amp into the Weber C10N/Q in my silverface version of the same amp.
What a difference! Now the blackface PR sounds almost identical to the silverface amp. After I get Bruce to make the same small changes he made to the silverface PR to the blackface PR, I expect it sound as good or better.
All this to say that I can't emphasize enough how big a change for the better a great speaker can make to an amp.
In all of my vintage Deluxe Reverb amps (I have three...) I've changed the stock POS 12" speaker to a Celestion G12H30, and the result is that my 22 watt DR's sound like a 30 or 40 watt amp.
And the same diff came to my PR's when I changed to a Weber C10NQ.
Guys, if you own what you know is a good amp, but it's not loud enough or full enough or inspiring enough: GET A GREAT SPEAKER! Even if you have to spend $100 or $200 for it.
The speaker can make all the diff in the world in improving your amp's tone and since it's such an expensive item, most manufacturers do not use top quality speakers in their amps...you'll have to do it yourself.
Killer, growly, deep, full and surprisingly loud and expressive tone! I just love it.
This amp, along with my modded blackface Deluxe Reverbs, has become my main amp.
I love it so much I bought another one - this time a '66 blackface Princeton Reverb. The amp came with new tubes and had recently been recapped by a tech other than Bruce...but it was ready to go.
The seller had replaced the original Jensen speaker with a cheap Italian made reissue Jensen C10Q. I like, but don't love the Jensen reissue C10Q, finding them a little to brittle on top, even after being broken in. I've owned a few, all of them given to me by players who didn't like them either! (laugh!)
So when I plugged my guitar into this blackface Princeton Reverb I wasn't surprised that the tone was thinner and brighter and less inspiring than my silverface version of the same amp with the Weber C10N/Q.
But I was surprised and HOW MUCH thinner and brighter and less inspiring the tone was! The blackface amp sounds about 2/3 as loud and not nearly as full and deep. To be honest, it sucked! (I don't like to use that word but it's how I felt...and what came to mind!)
So I un-plugged the reissue Jensen in the blackface PR and plugged the blackface PR amp into the Weber C10N/Q in my silverface version of the same amp.
What a difference! Now the blackface PR sounds almost identical to the silverface amp. After I get Bruce to make the same small changes he made to the silverface PR to the blackface PR, I expect it sound as good or better.
All this to say that I can't emphasize enough how big a change for the better a great speaker can make to an amp.
In all of my vintage Deluxe Reverb amps (I have three...) I've changed the stock POS 12" speaker to a Celestion G12H30, and the result is that my 22 watt DR's sound like a 30 or 40 watt amp.
And the same diff came to my PR's when I changed to a Weber C10NQ.
Guys, if you own what you know is a good amp, but it's not loud enough or full enough or inspiring enough: GET A GREAT SPEAKER! Even if you have to spend $100 or $200 for it.
The speaker can make all the diff in the world in improving your amp's tone and since it's such an expensive item, most manufacturers do not use top quality speakers in their amps...you'll have to do it yourself.
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