What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

Securb

One of Jerry's Kids
I am spinning this off of the "What's a "normal" number of guitars to own?" thread. I will jump into the fray first. I have a full stack, a 4x12 Fender combo, a 4x10 Randell combo and a Fender Half Stack in the basement. Upstairs in my office I have a Marshall VS100 1x12, an Excelsior 1x15 and a Berringer 1x10 keyboard amp. All with the exception of the Fender 4x12 (it needs work) have been used in the past month. I will admit I don't fall into the "normal" category but this works for me. I am flirting with buying a Roland JC 120 but if I do I will probably thin the heard, most likely the stack.
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

As many as needed to cover all of the tone you want. I have a boogie mkv into a custom 2x12, a Marshall sl5 combo, a fender hot rod deluxe, a Hughes and kettner tubemiester 18 into a jet city 2x12, and a peavey 3120 that I occasionally use into the jet city cab or a line6 spider valve v30 4x12
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

Hard to answer. I have owned way more amps than guitars. I like to have at least one low power amp (15 watts or lower) and one big amp (50-100 watts) to cover good cleans up to crunchy goodness. My choices are a '61 Gibson Discoverer combo and a '70 Traynor YBA-1 into a 4x12 of Celestion G12-65's. Recently I added a Traynor YGM-3 to my stable so I can cover tremolo, reverb and EL84 tones.
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

"Normal" number of amps would be 1-2.
"Good" number of amps would be 2-3.
"Better" number would be at least 3.
"Best" is whatever fits your needs/wants/desires and whatever you can afford.

I consider myself "normal", OK, well maybe not so normal, but I have 8 amps and wish I had at least 2-3 more. There are many on this forum that make my amp stable look like a toy barn.
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

Fender Prosonic 2x10 combo , Hughes and Kettner Tubemeister 18 combo(1 10), Trace Elliot Series 6 combo 1 15(SS wonderfulness), A Marshall 1922 2x12 cab and an Ampeg Classic 1x15 cab which can be used with any of the amps as an extension or the main.Stacking the Prosonic on the Marshall cab is my normal gig rig and the extra 15 under the Trace Elliot will shake things off the wall and move stuff on my desk. Whatever it takes to get the sounds you want is the right amount. Haven't owned a stack in over 20 years ,wish I had kept a few of them .
 
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Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

For those with GAS: more.

For those with spouses/significant others: less.
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

I'm almost ashamed to admit I own 5 guitar amps and a bass stack right now. I don't know how that happened.
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

I have more amps than I have electric guitars. That can't be normal.
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

My thing is that I can trade and sell guitars but I don't ever get rid of an amp. And I have fun taking them each out once in a while.
SVT-VR, Micro SVR-VR, Eden World Tour, '64 Fender Bassman stack, GK 800RB, Marshall JCM800, Marshall Micro Stack, '64 Princeton Reverb. Now that I write this out, maybe I should reconsider selling a couple...
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

I've got two at the moment. I would consider 4 the optimal point of maximum versatility without having a stupid amount of stuff. Consider this - with four amps, one could have a Fender, a Marshall, a Vox, and a Mesa. I can't imagine a more versatile rig than that.
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

As many as I can get!!! Currently 4 Fenders and 2 peaveys.......
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

When I get there, I'll let you know. Currently, it runs at:

Marshall 8080 Valvestate combo
Fender Super Sonic 22 Custom
Trace-Elliot Speed-Twin 50w combo
Victory V30 'Countess' head
Ampmakers SE5a head
Vox 'Lil' Night Train head
Zvex Nano head
Boss Cube 80w bass combo
TC Electronic BG250 bass combo

Hmmm... Probably more than I thought I had, and that doesn't include the PODs.
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

I know a guy who owns 3 Ferraris (308GT, Testa Rossa, and 2014 458 Italia) and has got another one showing-up next Monday (brand new $400K F12 Berlinetta). That's "normal" for him I guess. I've got "enough" amps (though I always want more) for me. But for some guys, I have too many, and others, not enough. As long as your family isn't being neglected as a result of your amp "addiction"... I think that "normal" can be whatever you want it to be.


P.S. The ONLY amp that I've been jonesing for since I picked-up my two Ceriatone plexis last spring is a Friedman Brown Eye. Seriously... I've [mostly] kept my GAS to pedals since I picked-up those amps (and a few LPs and Strats). Once you've tried enough things, you find yourself in a mode where you know the kind of gear that float your boat, and you have little desire to piddle around with amps outside your comfort zone (and you probably have several amps that stuck around due to being comfortable for you). It's good to experience those "supermodel" amps that got your heart going... but once you've been with enough items of gear, you seek a few comfortable ones to hang onto and [mostly] go back to the business of PLAYING without so much distraction from gear lust.
 
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Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

It depends on what you use them for I think. For most people I think the 'normal' amount is about two, as most people would like an amp with a gain sound they love and one with a clean(er) sound they love. For myself I can see two; a Fender Deluxe or something in a similar vein for live use and louder home practice, and some small combo for regular home practice and songwriting. Most of my tone comes from my pedalboard so I realistically only need one solid amp.
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

I have 4 heads and a combo. That number might go to 5 heads and a combo if things go how I want them to...
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

I consider myself amp rich at the moment.

I have my old SUNN SS Solos II 212 combo, but don't play it anymore--it needs some work.

I have a Peavey Combo 300 bass amp that is rarely used, since I'm not a bass player. The Peavey was to replace an old Randall Commander 115 bass combo--which will be going away shortly. (Great for guitar, BTW.) I also have a custom-made 112 bass combo, made years ago by a company in Seattle call Bozotronics. I have used that over the years for everything--PA, bass, guitar, monitor...terrific little amp. And I have two of the Acoustic Control AB-50s; these get used for bass, acoustic guitar, and then mostly for amplifying my Alesis Drum Machines.

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And then the Mesas:

DC-3 112 V30 Combo;

Mark III blond tolex, red-stripe, 112 EVM Combo, reverb, EQ, Simul-class, with matching 112 EVM Thiele cab;

Mark III black tolex, blue stripe, 112 Celestion 100 combo, reverb, EQ, Simul-Class, with matching JBL E-120 Thiele cab;

Mark IVa black tolex, 112 EVM combo, with matching 112 EVM Thiele cab;

Mark V black tolex, 112 C-90 combo, with matching 112 V30 Wide-Body Closed Back cab;

Maverick blonde tolex, 212 V-30 Combo;

Mark III 200-watt Coliseum head, no stripe, reverb, EQ.


========================================


In addition to the cabs listed, I also have:


212 Horizontal Recto, V-30s;

212 Half-Back, C-90 top/MS-12 bottom;

412 Half-Back, C-90s top/EVM bottom;

412 Half-Back, all EVM. (This cab weight A TON!!! But sounds fabulous!)


I tend these days to mostly gig with one of the Mark Series combos and a Thiele.

The DC-3 is perfect for small gigs and jams, and it also sounds great on top of a Thiele; it's also fun to play when I can really open it up. It is very dynamic and sounds like a much bigger amp.

The Mark III Coliseum is all about explosive power and maximum headroom, and could not be more different than the "Class A" Maverick with it's sweet, creamy, compressed chime. These are both favorites, and they both put a smile on my face, yet so different. Can't explain.

My Mark III with the blond tolex is even more rare than the exotic wood cabs. The Simul-Class combos have a more liquid tone and feel than the Mark III Coliseum head. The blue-stripe Mark III combo with the Celestion is a very aggressive-sounding amp, but the silky JBL in the Thiele cab really smooths it out. These may eventually go away.

The Mark IV has more control over the R2 and LEAD channels than the Mark III, but it's real strength lies in all the different ways that the power section can be configured.

And the Mark V is like having 27 different amps in one unit. I've had it a year and a half, and I'm still finding great tones. But (And this is the cool part!), when I first got it, it only took me five minutes or less to dial in gig-able tones on all three channels.


========================================

Yet, with all of these amps, I still find myself GAS-ing for others. I still love vintage Marshalls and JCM 800s; and I have always wanted a complete collection of each of the mid-'60s blackface Fender models--how cool would that be! Even if I did get them, I'm probably only going to gig with the Mesas, so it not really practical.

There are a couple of other Mesa amps I'd like to have: a Heartbreaker, a Tremoverb, a Stiletto Ace, and a Royal Atlantic, to start. :)

But it has been clear to me over the last 35 years of my career that amps play a vital role in one's sound...and maybe the key piece to the whole issue. And that is one of the things that I like about the Mesas--it seems like every guitar sounds great through them.

So, I am definitely in the "MORE" camp. I lot of it just depends on the music you play and the venues. I think a guy doing country gigs in dive bars with nothing but a Tele in his hands could make it with only a Super Reverb. But a guy that plays in a jazz band, a country band, and a hard rock band, and does session work might want a Princeton Reverb, Deluxe Reverb, a Twin and a JCM 2000 half-stack. It is a good thing to have various sizes in power amps for different venues. Mine go from 10, 15, 30, 35, 45, 75, 85, 90, to 200 watts.

And like a guitar, if you have a favorite, Number One amp that you use for most of your gigs, say a Deluxe Reverb--you'd better have a backup in case it goes down. Having to use your Krank half-stack at your weekly jazz club gig, might not cut it.

Bill
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

hmm
Carvin Belair
Carvin Redline combo bass amp
Laney GC80A
20 watt peavey max bass amp
Cube 30

two joyo preamp pedals
digitech amp modeling pedal

multiple speaker cabs 1x18 and 1x15
 
Re: What's a "normal" number of amps to own?

Boogie, holy hell!!!

I run a stereo setup with a Marshall JTM 45/plexi clone and a Ceriatone Dumble inspired lunchbox amp (+ pedals for tonal variety).
I also have a Ceriatone Princeton clone which is sitting in the corner atm.

I felt bad that I was keen to pick up one of those Fender 68 deluxe amps that are just out, but you amp collection is amazing in size.
 
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