Jake's Backdoor Hippie-palooza, 2014 Edition

BackdoorArts

Senior Member
2014-041:

Working In A Vacuum

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Doesn't really have to be old as there are many great guitar amp builders still making great, new tube amps, but this one happens to be old. '73 Fender Princeton Reverb. First tube amp I ever bought for guitar, and one I won't part with.

I had no idea you could still even buy tube anything anymore.


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BackdoorArts

Senior Member
Tube amps have never gone away. Fender and Marshall still make them, but they've moved away from the hand-wired variety due to the cost of production and now use PCB board with components either mounted straight to the board or wired to it. While this greatly reduces cost, reliability and repair become an issue, and it compromises tone in a lot of ways.

There is a whole cadre of small builders out there who still do the hand-wired stuff. Some, along with making amps of their own design, also specialize in converting the modern "reissue" amps from PCB board to hand-wired to original specs (Allessandro, Billy Penn). Others specialize in making faithful reproduction of old Fender "Blackface" and "Tweed" amps (Headstrong, Clark, Victoria). Still others make their own designs that are inspired by classic old amps by Fender, Marshall, Gibson and Vox, but take it in their own direction, often building in Master Volume and attenuation circuits so that the sound that used to only be available at full, deafening volume can now be had by a guy like me in his music room. My favorite is an amp by my friend Steve Carr from NC called the Mercury. It's a very loud 8 watts, but has an attenuation circuit to bring the volume down to an equivalent 1/10 Watt level, allowing you to get incredible high distortion sustain without waking anyone in the house (the design was inspired by the arrival of his first child). Makers like Carr, Senn, Dr. Z, Germino, Top Hat, Matchless, Bad Cat, Rhinehart, Tone King, 65, Clark, Headstrong, Victoria, Divided By 13 ... (the list goes on and on) ... are making incredible amplifiers that make it possible to have to tone of the old vintage stuff without the worry of 40-60 year old components failing on the road.

The hard part these days is finding tubes that are of the quality that you could get back in the day. Modern production is plagued by cheap components and frequent failure, making the vintage New Old Stock tube market a real cash cow. Folks hunt down and stash away loads of old Mullard, GE and RCA tubes, particularly anything made to military grade specs.
 

BackdoorArts

Senior Member
As if the timing couldn't be better, a friend of mine posted this to Facebook this morning - "Part Of My Tung Sol Collection - Life Is Too Short For Crappy Tone"

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BackdoorArts

Senior Member
And here I am complaining about +20's, that minus stuff needs to stay up north.

Thankfully my office is one door from my bedroom and I don't have to go out in this stuff except to clear it. We're supposed to get anywhere from 8-14" tonight, on top of the 8" of powder and ice we've got, but at least we know how to handle ourselves in it. ;)

I've actually enjoyed going out and shooting in it. It makes for pretty pictures. Here's another from yesterday.

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Krs_2007

Senior Member
Nice shot, its just cold and no sun here. We are suppose to get sun today. The snow helps, other than that there isn't much to snap a picture of for us
 

BackdoorArts

Senior Member
Thankfully my office is one door from my bedroom and I don't have to go out in this stuff except to clear it. We're supposed to get anywhere from 8-14" tonight, on top of the 8" of powder and ice we've got, but at least we know how to handle ourselves in it. ;)

I've actually enjoyed going out and shooting in it. It makes for pretty pictures. Here's another from yesterday.

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Drove past this today and 3/4 of the icicles were laying in ruins. And it never got above 20 degrees!!
 
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