Author
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Topic: Vox amp models
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Bill Creller Member From: Saginaw, Michigan, USA
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posted 20 April 2006 06:04 PM
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I see Vox amp models called AC15, Ac30 etc. Those must be a class of power output as opposed to the name of a particular amp, like Pacemaker etc. Anyone shed any light on this? I see replacement transformers listed for AC15, and AC30, which seem to indicate the wattage. |
Chris LeDrew Member From: Newfoundland, Canada
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posted 20 April 2006 07:23 PM
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Yes, that is the wattage of the particular models. The AC30 is only 30 watts, but it's Class A....... so it's LOUD. I had one of these for a few years but sold it last summer because it was 90 pounds. The AC30 is a great amp if you have a roadie or a tech to lug it for you. Too bad great tone often comes in heavy packages. |
Bill Terry Member From: Bastrop, TX, USA
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posted 21 April 2006 08:12 AM
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The AC-15 is about the loudest 15W amp you'll ever play through. I bought one with the blue Vox speaker a while back and for me it's the perfect gigging volume for guitar. Some claim it doesn't sound like an AC30, maybe not but it definitely sounds like a Vox...I see that it's been reissued from China as the AC15-CC. The 90's UK made reissues were bringing top dollar on ebay (~$1000 with the blue Vox speaker), so somebody must have noticed.
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Chris LeDrew Member From: Newfoundland, Canada
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posted 21 April 2006 08:55 AM
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The AC15 is way better, IMO, than the AC30 because it has a master volume and reverb. I modded the AC30 I had. I had a master volume put where the Cut knob was.......what a tone. My amp tech said it was wired like a Matchless. |
Stephen Gambrell Member From: Ware Shoals, South Carolina, USA
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posted 21 April 2006 11:24 AM
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I have a new AC30CC, and it has a master volume, as well as reverb. The BEST Tele amp I've ever had, althought the tone knobs take some getting used to---but it IS loud, and it IS heavy!! BTW, steel sounds pretty good through it, at lower volumes. |
Chris LeDrew Member From: Newfoundland, Canada
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posted 21 April 2006 01:38 PM
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So, the CC's have a master and reverb? Cool.....I'll have to take a peek. I did get a chance to plug into the Chinese Vox with the 10" and one preamp tube - the VS30 I think it's called. I was totally blown away by it. It's cheap, too...about $300 US. If I was playing six-string more regularly I'd get two of these and run them in stereo. |
Tony Prior Member From: Charlotte NC
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posted 21 April 2006 04:04 PM
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The AC30's are great amps..
[This message was edited by Tony Prior on 21 April 2006 at 04:29 PM.] |
Bill Creller Member From: Saginaw, Michigan, USA
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posted 23 April 2006 07:50 PM
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So, the AC15 and AC30 are what they are called as models, and the old Pacemaker etc is a model name like an AC15 ? Sorry I'm so slow on the uptake here, just confused. |
Ray Riley Member From: Des Moines, Iowa, USA
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posted 23 April 2006 08:06 PM
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I have a VOX Cambridge amp, 1962 with the bulldog speaker still there. The pots all need replaced, but it still sounds like a VOX and is crisp. it went thru a fire in 1983 and has been recovered, and the speaker was reconed once and could probably use it again. 45 watts Just Rambling, Weighs the same as a 112 peavey, Ray------------------ Sho-Bud S-12 and a brand new N112
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Mickey McGee Member From: Arizona, USA
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posted 24 April 2006 02:19 AM
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I have a friend that has a 15 watt Vox valvetronics amp that is really small and really loud and sounds great with a Les Paul gold top-I thought this little amp would be like a fender champ amp-boy was I wrong and its made in China-I swear they are going to take over the world. |
David Doggett Member From: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
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posted 24 April 2006 09:06 AM
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The Valvetronix series is getting rave reviews - small, light, inexpensive, with killer models. They use a real tube in the modelling, and use a solid state boost. The speakers are closed back and very efficient. I got the little 5 watt battery-powered model. It is incredibly loud, and the models are great, even without the tube that comes in the bigger ones. The clean channel can do steel, and the blues and metal channels are great for regular guitar. The way you access the effects is limited. But it's fine for just the basics of an amp model and reverb. Being so inexpensive and Chinese, some reliability problems are reported (haven't had these problems myself). But the price is almost two-for-one, so getting a second one for backup is practical.------------------ Student of the Steel: Zum uni, Fender tube amps, squareneck and roundneck resos, tenor sax, keyboards |