Opinions on Fender Deville for Steel
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- P Gleespen
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Opinions on Fender Deville for Steel
Now, I know these are great amps for guitar, but do any of you fellers play steel through one of these amps? Does the Fender Deville have enough power for a live situation?
I'm looking for a tube amp that is clean for standard steel applications, but that I can also overdrive if I want to.
I'm looking for a tube amp that is clean for standard steel applications, but that I can also overdrive if I want to.
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I bought a new one a couple of years ago, and I kept it about 4 hours before taking it back and trading and losing $100 in the process. Absolutely the worst amp I have ever used, either for guitar or steel. It might be alright if you wanted to play rock guitar with a lot of distortion, but completely useless for good country music. I probably have at present 25 or so amps and have owned lots of others in my life.
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There is a "clean" channel and an "overdrive" channel. I run the clean channel and haven't had to turn it up over "3" yet to get the volume/tone I need. I'll also run the "overdrive" (which does break up easily) when playing rock and blues steel.
The other thing to note, is that for extreme volume situations, I mic it and run it through the PA...I would NEVER try to run a "point source" at those volume levels...you can never get a good band mix.
The other thing to note, is that for extreme volume situations, I mic it and run it through the PA...I would NEVER try to run a "point source" at those volume levels...you can never get a good band mix.
- Rick Johnson
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- J D Sauser
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I used one for about a week, a year or so ago. I liked it quite well. It's got that sharp, sparkling, bright "Speedy West" sound.
It's not an amp to play those 2 or 3 tunes every body seems to be trying to play on E9th... But for the "hot" stuff it kicked... well, you know what.
The only real problem I had with it was, that the reverb is solid state and it sucks...big time (IMO) so, it went back to the store (for a FULL refund ).
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The future belongs to culture. jaydee@bellsouth.net
It's not an amp to play those 2 or 3 tunes every body seems to be trying to play on E9th... But for the "hot" stuff it kicked... well, you know what.
The only real problem I had with it was, that the reverb is solid state and it sucks...big time (IMO) so, it went back to the store (for a FULL refund ).
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The future belongs to culture. jaydee@bellsouth.net
- Martin Abend
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I have a HotRod Deluxe, which is the same amp except for 1 12" speaker, 40 watts and a special boost-channel. I just LOVE this amp! It has little clean headroom and breaks up easy and it is probably not suited for a ultra-clean country sound, but I don't play country anyway. This amp really rocks. For larger venues I'd mike it instead of buying a more powerful amp.
Considering all these different opinions I'm afraid you just have to hear it yourself...
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martin abend my homepage chicotarde@web.de
s-10 sierra crown gearless 3 x4 - fender hotrod deluxe
Considering all these different opinions I'm afraid you just have to hear it yourself...
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martin abend my homepage chicotarde@web.de
s-10 sierra crown gearless 3 x4 - fender hotrod deluxe
- Michael Johnstone
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I play regular guitar thru a 2-12" DeVille and I thought it broke up a bit too early in the gain structure so I had fellow forumite and tube amp witch doctor Bob Metzger work it over to see if we could pick up a little headroom.For a few bucks he put in bigger output tubes(NOS6550s)and a second transformer just to heat the new power tubes.That and a bias trim pot and some hand picked preamp tubes was all it needed to become the geetar amp of doom.While I was trying it out at his shop,he said "you know what you got now don't you - a steel amp" I tried pedal steel thru it and except for a sort of twangy,piercing Bakersfield thing,it still wasn't quite up to the task.HOWEVER......all you Stringmaster freaks listen up.Trust me-you won't find a more retro cool rig than a Stringmaster thru a DeVille - even a totally stock one. 2-12s is the ticket though - not 4-10s.Now I sound just like Santo AND Johnny. -MJ-
There are two different series of "DeVille" amps. IMHO it's important to differentiate between the two.
The first series was the "Blues" series covered in brown tweed. I don't think they make them any more. I played through one of the 4-10 models and really wasn't ga-ga over it, but some guys like them.
The current series are the "Hot Rod" models in black. I like them MUCH better for regular guitar.
I haven't played a steel through either series.
The first series was the "Blues" series covered in brown tweed. I don't think they make them any more. I played through one of the 4-10 models and really wasn't ga-ga over it, but some guys like them.
The current series are the "Hot Rod" models in black. I like them MUCH better for regular guitar.
I haven't played a steel through either series.