Pedal Steel + Bad Back = New amp?
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
- Steve Lipsey
- Posts: 1900
- Joined: 9 May 2011 8:51 pm
- Location: Portland, Oregon, USA
- Contact:
Christopher-
I used a 40 watt Pedal Steel Mini for a long time, and now use a Half and Half. The tone of the Mini was a bit (subtly) better, especially when the amp was pushed enough to get the power tubes working, but a little more than that and you do find the amp to start to break up - but there, it is in a very pleasing way - I used to enjoy playing nice clean backup and then adding a little edge to solos that way. So if you want really clean - but warm - the Half and Half is the way to go. For warm, then with some edge, the Mini was better. And if you mic the amp and play quietly all the time, there's not much difference. IMHO, of course.
The amp I miss is the Mini. I'm not sure why I sold it - I guess I just decided that the Half and Half was way more than good enough, was a bit lighter, and had more power for those very rare times when I really had to pull out the jams and be monster loud...
For guitar, the all-tube Mini would be a clear winner (IMHO). For steel, the tube preamp in the Half and Half is enough to warm up the sound...and some guitar player do seem to dig that sound. They both take effects pedals very well....
I used a 40 watt Pedal Steel Mini for a long time, and now use a Half and Half. The tone of the Mini was a bit (subtly) better, especially when the amp was pushed enough to get the power tubes working, but a little more than that and you do find the amp to start to break up - but there, it is in a very pleasing way - I used to enjoy playing nice clean backup and then adding a little edge to solos that way. So if you want really clean - but warm - the Half and Half is the way to go. For warm, then with some edge, the Mini was better. And if you mic the amp and play quietly all the time, there's not much difference. IMHO, of course.
The amp I miss is the Mini. I'm not sure why I sold it - I guess I just decided that the Half and Half was way more than good enough, was a bit lighter, and had more power for those very rare times when I really had to pull out the jams and be monster loud...
For guitar, the all-tube Mini would be a clear winner (IMHO). For steel, the tube preamp in the Half and Half is enough to warm up the sound...and some guitar player do seem to dig that sound. They both take effects pedals very well....
www.facebook.com/swingaliband & a few more....
Williams S10s, Milkman Pedal Steel Mini & "The Amp"
Ben Bonham "CooderNator" archtop parlor electric reso w/Fishman & Lollar string-through
Ben Bonham "ResoBorn" deep parlor acoustic reso with Weissenborn neck and Fishman
Ben Bonham Style 3 Tricone., 1954 Oahu Diana, 1936 Oahu Parlor Squareneck
Williams S10s, Milkman Pedal Steel Mini & "The Amp"
Ben Bonham "CooderNator" archtop parlor electric reso w/Fishman & Lollar string-through
Ben Bonham "ResoBorn" deep parlor acoustic reso with Weissenborn neck and Fishman
Ben Bonham Style 3 Tricone., 1954 Oahu Diana, 1936 Oahu Parlor Squareneck
- Jim Newberry
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Similar to Malcolm's solution... I use a Quilter Tone Block 200 head (very valve-feeling, and only a couple of pounds of weight) and a Mojotone "UltraLight" or some such cabinet plus a Neo 12 inch speaker. The cabinet is about 18 pounds with speaker. I mostly play homebuilt valve amps, but this is my lightweight/super loud rig.
"The Masher of Touch and Tone"
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- Malcolm McMaster
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Jim, is that the Pro Block the one with built in reverb, or the standard tone block, how do you find it? Thinking on getting a spare amp, your opinion would be welcome.
MSA Millenium SD10, GK MB200, Sica 12inch cab, Joyo American Sound Pedal/ Jay Ganz Straight Ahead amp, Telonics 15inch in Peavey cab, Digitech RP150, Peterson tuner.Hilton volume pedal.Scott Dixon seat and guitar flight case.
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New Peavey Session 115
To be shipping soon.
- Jim Newberry
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Malcolm, I got my 200 just before the 101 came out, and way before the Pro 200 was announced, so no experience with the Pro 200's reverb. I just use a little reverb from a pedal for the tone block or my tweeds anyway. I like that the Pro 200 has a little more tone shaping, but mine's fine as is. Of course, I'm looking for a little rawer, fatter sound than most pedal steel players, since I play 50's style non-pedal stuff.
"The Masher of Touch and Tone"
-1950 Fender Dual Pro 8
-1950's Fender Dual Pro 6
-Clinesmith D8
-Clinesmith 8-string Frypan
-Clinesmith Joaquin
-~1940 National New Yorker
-~1936 Rickenbacher B6
-Homebuilt Amps
-1950 Fender Dual Pro 8
-1950's Fender Dual Pro 6
-Clinesmith D8
-Clinesmith 8-string Frypan
-Clinesmith Joaquin
-~1940 National New Yorker
-~1936 Rickenbacher B6
-Homebuilt Amps
- Malcolm McMaster
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- Location: Beith Ayrshire Scotland
- Scott Parker
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- Bob Hoffnar
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Chris,
There is really no reason to buy anything in the US. The U.K. has a fantastic tradition of guitar amp building. For light speakers Check out Celestion stuff . They make a
Neo.
My favorite speakers for years were all made in the UK. Also There of tons of guys making clean powerful class D amps. All super light. Look at bass amp heads.
I just bought some new audio gear made in England and it was cheaper and better than what was available over here.
There is really no reason to buy anything in the US. The U.K. has a fantastic tradition of guitar amp building. For light speakers Check out Celestion stuff . They make a
Neo.
My favorite speakers for years were all made in the UK. Also There of tons of guys making clean powerful class D amps. All super light. Look at bass amp heads.
I just bought some new audio gear made in England and it was cheaper and better than what was available over here.
Bob
- Tom Voessing
- Posts: 16
- Joined: 26 Aug 2015 8:33 am
- Location: Germany
Hello Chris,
I found this amp recently on the inernet. It still needs a cabinet but it weighs not much more than two pounds:
http://bluguitar.com/english/AMP1.html
it is a relatively new product and I wonder if it is good for the pedalsteelguitar. The clean-channel soundsamples at least sound promising to me.
Regards
Tom
I found this amp recently on the inernet. It still needs a cabinet but it weighs not much more than two pounds:
http://bluguitar.com/english/AMP1.html
it is a relatively new product and I wonder if it is good for the pedalsteelguitar. The clean-channel soundsamples at least sound promising to me.
Regards
Tom
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- Location: Brussels, Belgium
What about this small and light (19 pounds,8.61 kg) combo (8" speaker) ?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mpQYwiPDLa8
And the very same combo with a 12" speaker !
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvzWXy3ox7Y
http://www.quilterlabs.com/index.php/pr ... h-2-8-inch
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mpQYwiPDLa8
And the very same combo with a 12" speaker !
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvzWXy3ox7Y
http://www.quilterlabs.com/index.php/pr ... h-2-8-inch
Last edited by John Sluszny on 26 Mar 2016 11:44 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Pedal Steel + bad back = new amp?
Seriously consider what Jack Stoner has. I have the BX 500 amp and it is great and weighs 5.8 LB. Plenty of power at 500 watts. It has one 12 AX7 tube in the pre-amp section which is switchable in or out. Sounds much better with the tube. No reverb but I use a Wet Reverb pedal which sounds great. A light weight cabinet with a 15 inch neo speaker completes the rig. Plus, you have "mission control" right at your finger tips.
I got mine new for $319.00 including shipping. I think now they are up to about $350.00. I have it rack mounted along with my Quilter rack mount. I am now using the Quilter, but the BX 500 is a keeper. If my Quilter dies during a show, I only have to move a few cords to the BX 500 and in a matter of seconds, I am up and running. The BX 500 was my only amp for about a year and I was perfectly happy with it. I just wanted a spare rack mount amp and like to try different things, so I got the Quilter. Also light weight and 200 watts, but almost 3 times the money.
I got mine new for $319.00 including shipping. I think now they are up to about $350.00. I have it rack mounted along with my Quilter rack mount. I am now using the Quilter, but the BX 500 is a keeper. If my Quilter dies during a show, I only have to move a few cords to the BX 500 and in a matter of seconds, I am up and running. The BX 500 was my only amp for about a year and I was perfectly happy with it. I just wanted a spare rack mount amp and like to try different things, so I got the Quilter. Also light weight and 200 watts, but almost 3 times the money.
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Re: Pedal Steel + bad back = new amp?
The Quilter ? Which model ? Thanks !George Kimery wrote:...I am now using the Quilter,...
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Pedal Steel + bad back = new amp?
John, to answer your question about which Quilter, I have the Steelaire rack mount. It uses two spaces of rack and is very light weight and has plenty of volume. Shipping on this to Belgium would not cost a lot of money. You should be able to pick up a speaker cabinet in Europe, or, just use an existing amp and unplug the speaker, then run a cable from the Quilter to the speaker. I also use the 3 cable hookup. This adds a buffer and I like the sound better with this hookup. I don't think you can beat the price I got. If you are interested, send me a PM and I will give you the source and the price I paid, which included shipping.
Afterthought: QSC has built very reliable power amps for years. The Steelaire should be very reliable. Pat Quilter is not a new kid on the block when it comes to building dependable electronics. Since the rack mount is so light and small, it would not cost a whole lot to send it in for repairs if you can't find someplace in Europe to do repairs.
Afterthought: QSC has built very reliable power amps for years. The Steelaire should be very reliable. Pat Quilter is not a new kid on the block when it comes to building dependable electronics. Since the rack mount is so light and small, it would not cost a whole lot to send it in for repairs if you can't find someplace in Europe to do repairs.
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- Malcolm McMaster
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George/John, if it is the Steelaire rack head you are talking about, it is available in Europe, through three Quilter dealers, one in Germany and two in Denmark.The amp has a mod on it to operate in Europe/UK ( believe it is something to do with noise), it sells for about one third more than US price.
If you are talking about shipping one from US, it will need the above mentioned mod, and with shipping and taxes it will come to the price of one purchased from European dealers, or even more with the uncertainty of import taxes and shipping.
If you are talking about shipping one from US, it will need the above mentioned mod, and with shipping and taxes it will come to the price of one purchased from European dealers, or even more with the uncertainty of import taxes and shipping.
MSA Millenium SD10, GK MB200, Sica 12inch cab, Joyo American Sound Pedal/ Jay Ganz Straight Ahead amp, Telonics 15inch in Peavey cab, Digitech RP150, Peterson tuner.Hilton volume pedal.Scott Dixon seat and guitar flight case.
- Bob Hoffnar
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Re: Pedal Steel + Bad Back = New amp?
Chris, you can maybe fix your original problem of distortion by plugging into the second input of your delux it is slightly attenuated. Also if you like the sound of a fender deluxe do not take the advice from here. The quilter amps are very different in sound and feel.Christopher Hillman wrote:Hi all,
I'm having a few problems with my gear/sound/bad back.
Basically my Excel U-12 and a Tweed deluxe are both similar weights and i use them most days of the week.
Over the last year i've been getting some back problems. i shook them off last year by doing a lot of exercise but, when i play a lot of steel they always come back. Some of these problems are posture related but there are some to do with moving my gear around.
My idea at the moment is to try and get a lighter amp but, anything Fender that is smaller that the 40watt deluxe tends to distort on a show.
A friend of mine had an idea of maybe finding a way to drop the output of the pickup with resistors maybe? (im no electrician ) so it wouldnt be that hot for smaller amps. What do you guys think? at the moment im noticing the steel will distort my 40watt tweed when i have my strymon pedals inline...
I'm set on my sound which is the fender deluxe type of sound. Has anyone got any suggestions ? Any similar problems?
Thanks,
Chris
Bob