This little fellow popped up on CL, seller is the daughter of the original owner with paper work etc blah blah. Now I know these don't take pedlols as well as say a princeton, but wondering if anyone has any experience with these and what good price would be, I sort of think she is right on the money for how clean it is, but still a little more than I would be comfortable with.
Oh and while we are at it, would you prefer at 1970 Musicmaster Reverb head, or '68 Bassman? Kthnx
Last edited by Psyre on Wed Oct 31, 2012 9:55 am, edited 1 time in total.
I paid 300 for mine, but it is not nearly as nice cosmetic shape. It also needed about $180 worth of work, which included a new electrolytic capacitor. I think it takes pedals pretty darn well, and is the perfect apartment amp for me. The pedals in this video are running through my Champ: [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W9i-xcT9aQ8[/youtube]
wow, that sounds lovely, way better on the low end than I was expecting. Asking price is $400, works perfectly aparently. Probably not likely with my current situation, but I need an apartment amp, all I have atm is my Bassman.
That's what I'm thinking, I just have to hope it lasts a week so I can get rent/bills out of the way, If I was not a grown up I would probably have it right now.
I always want them cheaper but mainly because I didn't hit at them when they were cheap. Too loud for apartment use cranked, but fine set clean for pedals. It has the classic clean Fender preamp, just no reverb. The bias-vary trem is great on those.
When you ask about a Musicmaster Reverb head, do you mean a Bandmaster Reverb? If so, it's effectively a Super Reverb with a smaller output transformer and no speakers, obviously. An amp that was generally ignored until the last ten years.
D.o.S. wrote:Broadly speaking, if we at ILF are dropping 300 bucks on a pedal it probably sounds like an SNES holocaust.
friendship wrote:death to false bleep-blop
UglyCasanova wrote:brb gonna slap my dick on my stomp boxes