Showing posts with label Jimi Hendrix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jimi Hendrix. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

1965 Fender Showman amplifier. Killer bass or guitar head.

When I was in high school I had a cousin named Bryan. He had issues with telling the truth. But while I didn't trust him I loved the cat anyway. He wasn't a blood relative, just my god brother.

One day he showed up to my house with a Fender Showman, property of the Baltimore City Public School system. Yeah, he stole it.

But whatever. I'm sure they didn't notice it. The amp was missing tubes, badly neglected much like Bryan and that school system. It just needed help.

I was fascinated with the thing. I just wanted to get it working. I opened it up and shocked the hell out of myself on the still charged filter caps. It had power just no sound.

So I found a few tubes for it at Radio Shack and got some resistors that matched. I'm not sure if I even knew what a resistor was in those days. One just was burnt so I had to match it. Yes, Radio Shack in the Columbia Mall sold tubes! Good tubes. Not the crap made today.

I got it working. I remember it sounding like it was underwater, not in a bad way, it was just so warm.

Thus started my fascination with tube amps. And my fascination with the Fender Showman. I think I traded that chassis in on something I bought at Angela Instruments a couple years later. Early on when Steve had his shop in Savage Mill, or maybe in his house. Those were the days!

I did buy a working one when I was in Berklee. I used it for a while. I think I was fascinated as well cause a Marshall Plexi was intimidating to me. A Marshall seemed like an exotic nuclear power source. Yet, when I watched Jimi play Monterrey in the film, he had his Marshall and a glorious Showman amp too. Seemed more manageable to me.

So this one was from Indigo Ranch and had been sitting neglected for a couple or more decades. Simple re-cap, re-tube and there you go. I replace the (either 500pf or .1000pf) cap that feeds the phase inverter with a .002-.005. We're using the amp for a clean 80 watt bass amp. The Showman is 8 ohms, whereas the dual Showman is 4. I prefer these.

Such a beautiful sound......










Old caps. It's dumb but on an amp like this I re-use the sleeves cause they have the dates on them. But folks, do change the filter caps. It's just stupid not to!




Did the usual. New grounded cable yadda yadda..... Transformers are all original and this amp is no longer sad and neglected, its cutting tracks once again at Sonic Circus in Vermont!

J

Monday, November 13, 2017

Peter Florance 'grey bottom' 60 Stratocaster pickups

Just sprung for a set of these:




I bought a set from Ludlow Street Guitars back in '99. I still say they are my favorite Stratocaster pickups. He seems to be the only builder making grey bottom pickups with the correct wire for 1965-66. Everyone else insist on using the darker stuff used in the later 60's. It's optics mostly but looks matter even if you can't see them.

Oh yeah, how do they sound? He gets one thing wrong. The bridge pickup is about 7.48k. I've never seen an original Fender pickup that high in a Strat. But it's the kind of wrong I like. I need a macho bridge pickup that ventures into humbucker territory. Less high end, more low mids. All I can say is I threw these in and my guitar which was kind of inspiring came to life. Now it's really inspiring!

Bought these on EBay from "tHe aMp sHOp" in Los Angeles. Great spot. I know it well. Cost was $245 shipped. I don't think I could do better than this. I love them! Worth a go for your mid 60's Stratocaster clone. Big tone like it should be.

J

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

1967 Marshall JMP "Bluesbreaker" 4x10" combo. One of the greatest amps of all time!

This was a fun project, and the 2nd most valuable amp I've ever worked on, the first being a Howard Dumble that belonged to a famous guitarist (not all that impressed with that amp, I would sell it and buy 5-10 of these!).



I've always wanted one of these. They are quite rare. I don't think any amp has surpassed the early 'plexi' Marshall era in terms of sound and style. Looks do matter and these amps are quite beautiful to look at. And of course, they have a special sound as well. Nothing quite like them. Clear, warm and beautiful overdriven sound when pushed. This amp is essentially a Tweed Bassman with tremolo circuit wise but with a much more present mid range.

When I received this amp it was quite a mess. It had been badly damaged in shipping. Poor packing? Maybe. Marshall combos are tricky to pack properly. These amps can command up to $15k so in my opinion it's best to ship the chassis separately. That is a weak part of these amps, how they are mounted.















It's heartbreaking when this happens. Fortunately, everything was fixable and my client decided not to send it back. The company he bought it from are good people and they payed the bill right away. No insurance battle for my client....

So this amp required quite a bit of gluing and clamping. Plenty of doweling as well. A couple filter cans were damaged and some components became unsoldered. The lovely Mullard 5AR4 tube was destroyed so I found a good deal on a NOS one. We're not going to load up a Rolls Royce like this with cheap new glass. No sir, not gonna happen!

Now the crux of this article. The unreasonable fear of 'originality' and 'collectibility' and what that does to a technician.......

Once I got into this amp, and it was gone through by what I assume is a good tech, I found a few issues. First, the Russian tubes were biased hot. 95ma each. These early models don't have a trim pot for bias. My opinion? Screw your 'originality' and put a trim pot in there! Running this amp this hot could kill the output transformer and possibly the power transformer! I was alarmed at seeing this but I've seen this many times before. The fear to alter something to make it ACTUALLY WORK properly. So I added a 22k trim pot. Took 5 minutes to install. Do it. If your customer freaks out about a change like this, you don't need to sell your amp to that person. He/she is unreasonable.

Had a private audience with George Gruhn last month. His words: "If it's old it's been worked on. Even a Stradivarius has a new fingerboard if it' been played." Enough said! My job is to keep important parts like your priceless transformers safe. In this amp the transformers and speakers are original and that is a miracle at 49 years.

Now the next problem. The speakers. At low volume you could hear this bzzzzzzzt as the note decayed. All 4 speakers were bad. One was not moving at all due to a frozen voice coil, the others were all rubbing. At higher volume one would think "oh this rocks". Inspect each speaker. It's important to do this! And it's worth having these re-coned. I had these done at Speaker Repair Pros in Los Angeles. I don't know of anyone here in New York that I trust to do these. One place I called after the third time the man on the phone said "you can just buy new ones cheaper" I finally said "you just don't get it, thank you for your time...." So off they went to Los Angeles. They did a fantastic job as usual!

So why was this amp sold with 4 bad speakers? I don't know. I attribute that to the same fear I wrote about above. In fact, in all honesty I refused to hear it myself. I was a bit afraid to tell my client he needed to get the speakers rebuilt cause I've dealt with many unreasonable clients who are so afraid their amp will lose all of its value. Bollocks to that! And fortunately my client knows better. He want's an amp that kicks it good, not one that will just be looked at!



I love the old logo on these speakers. Classy as can be.

Link to Speaker Repair Pros. They rock! https://www.speakerrepair.com/

So next was the output tubes. We went for Siemens EL34. This amp was built in the first year Marshall switched to EL34 tubes. My favorite year for the old Marshalls!



Biased this pair at 35ma each. Good safe place to run this amp. I also added a pair of 1k 5 watt resistors for the screen grid. The early Marshall amps didn't have them though curiously enough the JTM-45 loaded with 5881 or KT66 tubes had a 470 ohm resistor in this place. Trouble is when you blast this amp without those resistors in place the tubes draw a lot of current and you can pop a tube. You lose a negligible bit of tone by installing them but, it's worth it for the extended tube life. I think it was fine at one point when you had 800 volt Mullard El34 tubes available, but even the Siemens tubes should have those resistors in place.

The Siemens EL34 is by far my personal favorite EL34. Smooth and creamy, no harsh overtones like modern tubes. They were original equipment in 80's 800 Marshall amps and I've seen them go for over a decade being gigged with on a regular basis. And, amps back then were far more brutal on their gear......

Preamp tubes survived, and they are all Mullard long plate 12AX7. The finest for this amp!



One thing about the old Marshall amps the younger folks don't get is, they are 2 channel low gain amps. They evolved into the metal monsters we know and love or hate. These early ones are just as suitable for a jazz gig. In fact, they sound absolutely beautiful for those who want a nice clean tone. Jim Marshall supposedly hated his tremolo circuit but I found it to sound really nice.

These amps are probably the most guitar friendly versatile amps I know. A Tele, Strat, 335, Les Paul, big old Epiphone Jazz box, all sound great through one of these. The first Marshall I ever bought was a '77 JMP 2 input head. Got it for $200. Back in those days we didn't really have all this "true bypass' goodness. Pedals robbed your tone. But with that amp I didn't miss much. There was so much tone there I could stand to lose some. I was sold. My Fender Super Reverb was sold too. That amp was tough as could be. I wonder who has it now?

Amp sounds nice and tight now and is being loved in a happy home.

-JB

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

1974 Marshall 100 watt Super Lead (model 1959S)



Oh yes. The ticket to hell, or heaven depending on your point of view. This came to me with complaints of noise and poor volume. The owner runs it with only 2 of the 6550 tubes at 50 watts. He was certain it was dead tubes. These are big amps and I can make good dough on a tube sale for them. Caps too...

But the filters were all new and it's a good job too! And the tubes all tested great. Amp was only drawing about 6ma per output tube. So just a good cleaning and re-biasing is all it needed to get going. Also replaced the 100k cathode resistor in the cathode bias tone stack. It had drifted to 130k and this is common. Check that one if you have spits and crackles!

This particular one was modded to behave like a JCM800. Good job too. Nice, creamy and nasty distortion at any volume!

I was a 100 watt Marshall player for years. This is one of the last really attractive ones with the 60's styling. After that they went the way of the cheap looking President Ford/Carter suit. Boxy, ugly and ready for the CBGBs punk Los Angeles heavy metal era. Part of the early Marshall amplifiers appeal is it's beauty. They are some of the best looking amps on the planet. Notice how well it goes with my Persian carpet? Yes. Psychedelic all the way.

JB