Legendary Guitar/Bass Amps
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nearly every band I sound engineered for in the early nineties had a peavey bandit. They were load and bugger to balance with a shoddy PA, sometimes i didn't even run them through the desk as it wasn't worth it.samuelcotterall wrote:I still have one of these. It’s mega.Dingus wrote:Dave wrote: I don't think thats the same Bandit I had - mine looked different but I thought it was a 112 - it was 60 Watts.
This one?
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my church has one. love the amazing clean though.lorez wrote:nearly every band I sound engineered for in the early nineties had a peavey bandit. They were load and bugger to balance with a shoddy PA, sometimes i didn't even run them through the desk as it wasn't worth it.samuelcotterall wrote:I still have one of these. It’s mega.Dingus wrote:
This one?
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I'M GONNA LET YOU ALL IN ON ONE.
It's a 1978 Yamaha G100. Solid-state, 100W, with a near 300W high-efficiency speaker. You might hear some players call it the poor-man's JC-120, but they'd be dead wrong.
There are basically 3 things wrong with every JC-120:
- The Fender-style EQ section has very little midrange, and no tubes means there's no compression to soften the edges. It can be stunningly brittle.
- The hiss is so loud you think a faucet has been left on.
- It's almost always too loud.
The G100 corrects every one of these. The amp was designed by Paul Rivera, and he gave it a very well voiced Baxandall-style EQ, plus an active parametric with 9db cut-boost and a width control. You have all the range you need to get all the frequencies balanced as you want. Even better, the clever class A/B power amp operates at a higher voltage then conventional SS amps and uses giant power capacitors usually found on tube amps. This gives nearly no background noise and helps the amp give and respond more like a clean tube circuit. Finally, because it only has one power section as is better designed, it is also perfectly happy at bedroom levels. But it will still give you crisp cleans at drummer levels.
It is one of the most pleasant and useful amps ever made. And I got mine in a store for $73.
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There are basically 3 things wrong with every JC-120:
- The Fender-style EQ section has very little midrange, and no tubes means there's no compression to soften the edges. It can be stunningly brittle.
- The hiss is so loud you think a faucet has been left on.
- It's almost always too loud.
The G100 corrects every one of these. The amp was designed by Paul Rivera, and he gave it a very well voiced Baxandall-style EQ, plus an active parametric with 9db cut-boost and a width control. You have all the range you need to get all the frequencies balanced as you want. Even better, the clever class A/B power amp operates at a higher voltage then conventional SS amps and uses giant power capacitors usually found on tube amps. This gives nearly no background noise and helps the amp give and respond more like a clean tube circuit. Finally, because it only has one power section as is better designed, it is also perfectly happy at bedroom levels. But it will still give you crisp cleans at drummer levels.
It is one of the most pleasant and useful amps ever made. And I got mine in a store for $73.
sounds like this fits here:
stewart wrote:So, a couple of days ago we were in the studio doing some recording, and I fired up an old Selmer amp that was lying around and stuck it through an Orange 4x10. The guitar channel was fairly normal, not a million miles away from a fender twin but with no mid control. The bass channel was absolutely brutal, teeth-shatteringly loud.