Amp for Blues lapsteel recommendation with or without pedal
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
- Tony Palmer
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- Location: St Augustine,FL
Amp for Blues lapsteel recommendation with or without pedal
I'm in the market for an amp to use with my lapsteel and can't decide if a small tube amp that can be naturally or internally overdriven with pre gain control is better or should I get a less expensive solid state amp with an overdrive pedal (huge selection these days!)
I'll be playing blues and rock. I already have a Peavey 112 I use for my pedal steel but wanted something even smaller so not sure which type to buy.
I don't see the point in spending a lot of money on a boutique hand wired tube amp then having to tweak the sound even further by using a pedal. But I do want that screaming sustaining lapsteel blues sound.
I'll be playing blues and rock. I already have a Peavey 112 I use for my pedal steel but wanted something even smaller so not sure which type to buy.
I don't see the point in spending a lot of money on a boutique hand wired tube amp then having to tweak the sound even further by using a pedal. But I do want that screaming sustaining lapsteel blues sound.
Sierra S10 (three!), Peavey 112 and 115, Benoit dobro, Beard Model E dobro, Beard Roadophonic, MSA Superslide, Dean Nickless custom dobro
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- Tony Palmer
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Hughes & Kettner Tubemeister 18 with built-in power soak.
http://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/TM18H
http://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/TM18H
- Tony Palmer
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Epiphone Valve Junior
Erv, I have never seen an amp with so much confidence in its appeal that it was made with only one input and one knob!
That's a leap of faith for sure.
If only our pedal steel amps were that simple!
That's a leap of faith for sure.
If only our pedal steel amps were that simple!
Sierra S10 (three!), Peavey 112 and 115, Benoit dobro, Beard Model E dobro, Beard Roadophonic, MSA Superslide, Dean Nickless custom dobro
- Jerry Overstreet
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Yeah, that thing is a monster. Lots of features. Loud as most folks need for a moderate room. I know a guitar player that uses one. We play everything from light jazz to hard rock and it sounds great.Stephen Abruzzo wrote:Hughes & Kettner Tubemeister 18 with built-in power soak.
A bit pricey though and you still need a cab.
- Erv Niehaus
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- Dustin Rhodes
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Have played a Valve Jr. on 6 string. Wouldn't by my first or even fifth choice given the other options out there.
For my money I would get one of the new Quilter Mini heads and match it with the cab of your choice.
http://www.quilterlabs.com/index.php/pr ... -mini-head
For my money I would get one of the new Quilter Mini heads and match it with the cab of your choice.
http://www.quilterlabs.com/index.php/pr ... -mini-head
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i'd keep your eyes open for one of these, or something like it.Tony Palmer wrote:Stephen its for home and small gig use.
https://reverb.com/item/6320-alamo-embassy-1960-s-black
i got mine for $80, shipped, years ago.
my roommate got one recently for the exact same price.
they sound great, record well, and because they are so low powered and also seem to have a really inefficient speaker, they are perfect for home use.
i've used mine by itself for really small gigs, and used it as a preamp for a big amp as well...(www.youtube.com/watch?v=1qvoSuxaO7I)
i've both mine and my roommate's together for a slightly louder (but still quiet) gig.
that's probably way more info than you want, but that's what i'd do!
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Two lightweight (22lbs) offerings I've used with great success, both at low volume gigs and home:
Tube:
Blackstar HT5 Combo
Clean ch cranked gets into ACDC territory.
Dirty ch. Sings with sustain and crunches like Black Sabbath should you need that. Really great blues amp.
Caveat: you will run out of clean headroom if the band is not very controlled. Has a line out or you can mic it.
Transistors:
Roland cube 30 or 40xl
Lots more headroom, delay, reverb, multiple gain styles. Channel switching if you need it. A very analog, modelling amp.
It's a do it all small light box. I often use it for small venue pedal steel.
Need something louder? Cube 60 or 80XL Adds 12lbs
If you want tubes and more clean headroom the blues Jr or a Princeton reverb with your favorite drive pedal should cover lots of ground.
If you can play your guitar through the amps first, they may sort themselves out right quickly.
Happy Hunting
Tube:
Blackstar HT5 Combo
Clean ch cranked gets into ACDC territory.
Dirty ch. Sings with sustain and crunches like Black Sabbath should you need that. Really great blues amp.
Caveat: you will run out of clean headroom if the band is not very controlled. Has a line out or you can mic it.
Transistors:
Roland cube 30 or 40xl
Lots more headroom, delay, reverb, multiple gain styles. Channel switching if you need it. A very analog, modelling amp.
It's a do it all small light box. I often use it for small venue pedal steel.
Need something louder? Cube 60 or 80XL Adds 12lbs
If you want tubes and more clean headroom the blues Jr or a Princeton reverb with your favorite drive pedal should cover lots of ground.
If you can play your guitar through the amps first, they may sort themselves out right quickly.
Happy Hunting
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Hey, i'd like to add that i've had great results (both in studio and live..) with a late 50's Webcor tube reel to reel. I bought it cheap off of shopgoodwill.com. I just took the two wires off the internal speaker and stuck them onto a Switchcraft 1/4" jack, drilled a hole in the back panel wired it up and BOOYA! Thick Greezey tone that goes into "Rockin' The Fillmore (Humble Pie for those guessing') territory at full-tilt. just crank it up and use a VP. It's a 8ohm out, I've ran it through ALOT of different speakers, currently it sounds best into a mid 80's Marshall 1965A cab (4x10 Celestial G10L-35's).
'64 Sho-Bud Fingertip D-10 9+1, Goodrich VP, Sho-Bud/Evans Compactra 100 Custom, Sho-Bud/Evans Compactra 100 Head unit, '75 Tele, '77 Guild D25, '71 YBA-1, Marshall 4x10 and a Les Paul.
- Tony Palmer
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- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: St Augustine,FL
Wow that's pretty inventive Joel. Lenny I'm in Florida for the winter, down in the Keys
Im thinking the best bang for the buck might be a used Fender Blues Jr and be done with it. I can't get a sound I like from any of the overdrive pedals into a solid state amp.
Im thinking the best bang for the buck might be a used Fender Blues Jr and be done with it. I can't get a sound I like from any of the overdrive pedals into a solid state amp.
Sierra S10 (three!), Peavey 112 and 115, Benoit dobro, Beard Model E dobro, Beard Roadophonic, MSA Superslide, Dean Nickless custom dobro
- Jack Hanson
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Both the Blues Jr. and the Pro Jr. are excellent choices for lap steel. All three of mine (all are older models built in Oregon, not the newer models from Mexico) employ a 1/4" phone jack for their speaker connection, which makes experimenting with different speaker cabinets quick and easy.
Additionally, they both have been produced for a long period of time, so there's a gazillion used units out there. They have a good reputation, so if you find you don't like it (doubtful), you shouldn't have a problem if and when it comes time to sell.
Additionally, they both have been produced for a long period of time, so there's a gazillion used units out there. They have a good reputation, so if you find you don't like it (doubtful), you shouldn't have a problem if and when it comes time to sell.
- Tony Palmer
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- Location: St Augustine,FL
- Erv Niehaus
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- Tony Palmer
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- Erv Niehaus
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- Tom Wolverton
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What Erv said
I gotta agree with Erv. The Blues Jr is a great way to go. For lap steel, I prefer a 12" speaker.
To write with a broken pencil is pointless.
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How about a Vox AC4TV or a little fender vibro champ... and mike it. Only thing is you will need to add a reverb pedal as these amps do not have.
K
K
"Technology has given us the ability to repeat all the mistakes we have learned from history, but much faster, deadlier and with much greater accuracy" - KAB
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