The New Steve H wrote:My friend is talking about higher power, but it sounds like he may be asking for the wrong thing. I should get him to look for a Super Reverb and a Twin Reverb he can try side by side.
Hi Steve,
High power means different things to different people. Some musicians want more headroom to maintain a clean sound at all volume. Others want a very loud sound, not always popular with management or soundmen.
In some amps (Marshalls back in the day) more power produced a different sound quality in the 100 Watt version to the 50 Watt version, (but this was from different NFB resistors, power on the plates, under or over amounts of filter capacitors in the power supply).
You can build an amp that can have the tone of a larger amp (but at the same watts) by an additional parallel set of tubes. This amp would have the 100 watt sound with 4 tubes, disable (or remove) a pair and presto chango the 50 watt sound. Or you coud have an amp that is 4 tubes and loud with a half power switch to remove 2 tubes (Jim Kelley did this in his 60 watt 4 tube 6v6 amps that bear his name).
The Dual Showman (non-reverb) was the Fender Twin (without reverb) in a head and close back cab combination and later joined by the reverb version. Fender had a number of Amps built on the Fender Twin chassis with different configurations of speakers. The Twin is a combo amp with an open back. Something to consider if one speaker arrangement is preferrable to the other.
And which speakers? Jensens, Oxfords, and JBLs to name a few were used by Fender in the Twin Reverb, the JBLs were an upgrade. This makes a difference in the sound. (JBLs speakers and Head and Cab configuration were first used by Standel amps, which Leo copied shamelessly; imitation is rampant in the musical instrument industry. Outside of the industry it is called theft.) Possibly all that is needed is a Super Reverb with different speakers.
The recommendation of your buddy going out and listening to both types of amps is a good one, except many an amp (and car for that matter) was bought during a test drive, although that might solve which type of amp you were going to build for him. It might be better to arrange for him to try out a friend's or friends' amps to prevent impulse GAS. This would give him time to think about what he liked in the amps without the sales clerk hovering over you both ("Well, are you going to buy something, or not?")
A good question is what type(s) of music does he play and perform? Is this amp going to be his workhorse on gigs, or something to enjoy at home? Does he want headroom and clean, or does he want it to break up earlier? Power tube distortion (Jim Kelley), an overdrive sustain (Dumble), or none of these. 2 channel switching preamp? You are starting with a blank aural canvass, make sure he wants a tonal landscape instead of a sonic portrait.
Best Regards,
Steve