best amp for a stringmaster
Moderator: Brad Bechtel
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best amp for a stringmaster
I am sure I will get varied opinions on this, but is there one or two amps in particular that really bring out that perfect tone on a fender stringmaster more than others. has anyone actually compared several amps side by side for a comparison?
- Terry Wood
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- Erv Niehaus
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I agree with Erv, and I'd also add that for lower volume gigs a Fender Deluxe Reverb or a Pro-Reverb are both ideal. The Pro-Reverb is a very under-rated amp. Like a Super-Reverb but without the unwieldy size.
Basically, any Fender tube amp is ideal.
Basically, any Fender tube amp is ideal.
My rig: Infinity and Telonics.
Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg?
Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg?
- Erv Niehaus
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Love my Super Reverb
I have a '74 Super Reverb that I had a tech restore to blackface era specs, and my Stringmasters sound amazing though it. It IS a pain to move, though, so it stays pretty much as a home/recording amp. My Deluxe sounds very good at a bit lower volume.
Yep, Fender amps sound great with Stringmasters.
Yep, Fender amps sound great with Stringmasters.
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Erv
I haven't tried the RI TR w/15. I used to have a 1972 Vibrosonic that was great but the weight/power ratio didn't make it a gig amp for me.
I haven't tried the RI TR w/15. I used to have a 1972 Vibrosonic that was great but the weight/power ratio didn't make it a gig amp for me.
My rig: Infinity and Telonics.
Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg?
Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg?
- Erv Niehaus
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- David Doggett
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My vote is for any Fender tube amp, the older the better. I like 15" speakers for pedal steel, but 12s and even 10s work fine with non-pedal steels. I have a Pro Reverb, but am not crazy about it. It is the same size and almost as heavy as a Twin, with half the power. If you don't need the volume of a Twin, I'd go with a Deluxe with an efficiet speaker, and maybe a bigger tranny, if you need a little more volume than a stock Deluxe. If you like the 10s of a Super, but not the size and weight, then a Vibrolux would be good. The only problem with the old Fenders is that the prices are getting too high for the average working musician.
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This is an impossible question to answer!
What tone are you looking for?
A JTM45 Marshall sounds good. A tweed fender sounds good. A blackface deluxe sounds good...... They all sound good!
Its all what you like the tone of. Try every amp you can get your hands on and decide on your own. Sometimes there are some real winners out there that you wouldn't expect. My personal favorite is a Supro with single 15" and 2 6L6 tubes. has no model number, but it is the right size, right volume and the tone is fantastic.
You wouldn't expect this one to sound great for steel, but to me it is better than my 59 bassman for steel.
While a black vibrolux reverb and a super reverb have similar tube compliments, it appears the only difference is the speaker configuration, they are very different sounding amps. Both are very good sounding amps.
try em all, good luck!
What tone are you looking for?
A JTM45 Marshall sounds good. A tweed fender sounds good. A blackface deluxe sounds good...... They all sound good!
Its all what you like the tone of. Try every amp you can get your hands on and decide on your own. Sometimes there are some real winners out there that you wouldn't expect. My personal favorite is a Supro with single 15" and 2 6L6 tubes. has no model number, but it is the right size, right volume and the tone is fantastic.
You wouldn't expect this one to sound great for steel, but to me it is better than my 59 bassman for steel.
While a black vibrolux reverb and a super reverb have similar tube compliments, it appears the only difference is the speaker configuration, they are very different sounding amps. Both are very good sounding amps.
try em all, good luck!
- Terry VunCannon
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Cubes
A recent thread on this very forum gave extremely high points to the Roland Cubes. I like the sound of mine.
Last edited by Edward Meisse on 9 Jan 2007 11:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- George Keoki Lake
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The TWIN REVERB is a bit heavy if weight is a concern. I found the DELUXE REVERB (one spkr vs two) has a great sound for my CUSTOM T-3. Or, you might consider something really light in weight but packs a great sound, the ROLAND CUBE 30 (or 60). They each have a "tweed" setting, referring of course to the FENDER amp.
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The 'Bedroom Boys' may prefer the heavier tube amps, for me even 'though I have a roadie, it's the Peavey Nashville 112.
I THINK I could probably stretch to anything that sounded better, BUT IMHO there isn't.
FWIW.
1. Tubes on the road with all the vibration etc. don't last long and are inconsistent and generally unreliable.
2. In a home situation where the amps location is static they MAY be a better choice. But the line between 'Warm' and 'Distorted' is a very fine one to SOME ears.
I prefer super clean and any "Warmth" to be added via external effects.
I THINK I could probably stretch to anything that sounded better, BUT IMHO there isn't.
FWIW.
1. Tubes on the road with all the vibration etc. don't last long and are inconsistent and generally unreliable.
2. In a home situation where the amps location is static they MAY be a better choice. But the line between 'Warm' and 'Distorted' is a very fine one to SOME ears.
I prefer super clean and any "Warmth" to be added via external effects.
Peavey,Roland,AER
In the past 5 years I've tried the AER Compact 60, Roland Cube 60, and Nashville 112. All have really nice tone for Hawaiian (which I use the Stringmaster for). Portability is a key factor for me personally. If I could easily schlep a Twin - I would. But I agree with Basil - reliability and portability are two things 'tubies' sometimes don't excel at. Lately the Roland Cube 60 set on 'blackface' has been doing a good job for me. At home I use a Princeton Reverb. If you need to provide backline for Hawaiian players, you indeed will make lifelong friends of you give them a bunch of twins (or something similar)!
Chris
Chris
Chris Kennison
Rhythm Cats - steel, guitar, banjo, dobro
Gold Canyon, AZ
www.rhythmcatsshow.com
www.seldomfed.com
Rhythm Cats - steel, guitar, banjo, dobro
Gold Canyon, AZ
www.rhythmcatsshow.com
www.seldomfed.com
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