Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

Ep. 75: "We're Staying Positive"

Ep. 75: "We're Staying Positive"

FromThe Truth About Vintage Amps with Skip Simmons


Ep. 75: "We're Staying Positive"

FromThe Truth About Vintage Amps with Skip Simmons

ratings:
Length:
66 minutes
Released:
Jul 30, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

It's the 75th episode of the Truth About Vintage Amps Podcast and Skip is feeling upbeat and quoting from the classics. As always, he's also fielding all of your guitar amplifier questions.  This week's episode is sponsored by Amplified Parts and Grez Guitars.  Some of the topics discussed this week:  1:00: Weird California geopolitics 4:10 Recent Northern California barn finds: ES-335, a transitional Marshall, a 1955 Fender Tremolux with the original instruction page, an Epiphone Emperor Regent; Paul Chandler 14:36 A pre-war Vega amp gets fixed (almost); the humbucking coil on a field coil speaker 19:33 Reading from the 1955 Tremolux instruction page 22:45 Seeking information on Aztec Recording Studio 24:44 Venice, California's Harry Perry 25:28 A Hammond amp and test equipment preservationist speaks out 31:32 Troubleshooting a noisy hybrid Standel amp 38:19 More typewriter talk, forger Mark Hofmann 42:51 What's the deal with a 1966 Pro Reverb with a 1971 power transformer and various other oddities? 50:46 A Weller 8200 soldering gun that keeps shutting off, identifying good vintage 8200s 55:45 A 1977 Silverface Champ with a shocking three-prong plug  Co-hosted by the Fretboard Journal's Jason Verlinde. Email or send us a voice memo to: podcast@fretboardjournal.com or leave us a voicemail or text at 509-557-0848. And don't forget to share the show with friends.   
Released:
Jul 30, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Twice a month, guitar amp guru Skip Simmons fields your questions on vintage tube amp repair, restoration and collecting. Often hilarious and always insightful, it's like no other guitar podcast out there.