HalfDeaf said:I've heard a lot of buzz about the Lonestar Special. El84s are becoming really popular for awesome cleans - check one out.
I play a mkiv, and while it doesn't have the best cleans, they can get quite good, even at very loud volumes, with some tweaking. If you're interested in a mkiv, try one on the Rhythm 1 channel with the gain knob at 3 and pulled for bright. Most people run the gain too high for cleans and then it can sound somewhat flat and uninspiring. If it turns out that you like the mkiv cleans, then you'll have the added benefit of one of the most awesome crushing lead distortion channels I've ever heard!
nemesys said:To me, the Lonestar sounds a lot like the old Twin sitting in the back of your local music shop that was lovingly played by somebody for forty-odd years, worn out in that perfect way where every note is lively and bouncy, and all of the icepick has been played out of the speakers.
The F-Series and Express amps remind me more of a reissue Twin. It's a great sound, but not really in the same class as the Lonestar. It's a little stiffer and less bouncy, and the upper midrange is more prominent.
madryan said:EL-84's are fine for cleans at bedroom levels. They don't have anything like the kind of headroom they need to not break up at gigging volumes.
koolaid said:I played the Lonestar at GC and I definately thought it was the bees knees (thats good). I have a roadster and I really love channel 2 on fat.
The only problem with the roadster is that the clean channels have far less power.
I have to turn channels one and two all the way up just to match the volume of channels three and four set to like 11 o'clock.
Does anyone else have this kinda problem?
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