Fryette Deliverance Series II Review

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Background: I want to preface this by saying I don't consider myself a high gain player which most people associate with Fryette amps in general. I have always taken inspiration from the major names; Hendrix, SRV, Rhoads, Hetfield/Hammet so my influences are a wide range from 60's to 90's rock for the most part. As such, I've gravitated heavily towards Marshall sounds and Marshall style amps. Lately I've been branching out more to explore other types of amps like Mesas, Oranges, Soldanos, the venerable 5150s. With all that, what I've figured out is that I really love dynamic amps, like the way the old Marshalls clean up. So in searching "most dynamic high gain amp" one amp was prevalent in nearly every thread - the Fryette Deliverance.

Features: The Deliverance is known to be the slimmed down single channel offering from Fryette. I have amps with tons of options (Mesa Mark V, Friedman BE 100 Deluxe) and, as much as I love the idea of the versatility they offer, I just usually find the sounds I like best in those amps and end up leaving them there. So for me, a no frills, minimalistic approach really fits how I use my equipment.

Breaking down the controls, you have two gain knobs, Gain I and Gain II. The interesting thing is Gain I actually controls the overall feel of the amp, from crisp to full and thick. This also seems to shift the mid focus a bit, sitting it with lower mids than say a Marshall but higher than an Orange typically. Gain II adds pure saturation. There are 3 gain stages by default, but the More switch brings in a 4th gain stage. In the Less mode there's still enough gain to cover hard rock and 80s metal. Flipping it into more and now you can chug to more modern metal. Above the More switch is a Bright switch. As I mentioned, I'm a Marshall guy at heart so the bright switch stays on, it just adds a nice top end bite and sizzle that I expect to here when I strum through an overdrives chord. Next is two volume controls Vol I and Vol II (Solo), accessing Vol II requires a footswitch. What's nice about the switching is you can set the Bright and More mods to be on or off all the time, or to engage with the footswitch with Solo volume. A perfect configuration for kicking into a heavy chorus or solo. Then you get your typical Treble, Middle, Bass EQ controls in addition to Presence and Depth controls which play into the EQ of the power amp section.

On back there is an FX loop but I run my amps through a switcher that has a shared loop so I'm not a good judge of loop quality. It can output 4Ohm, 8Ohm, or 16Ohm to power one or two cabinets as well.

The amp gets its power from a quintet of 12AX7 type preamp tubes and 2 Sovtek KT88 power tubes (more on this later).

As far as features go, this may be no frills but may be just the right amount for someone wanting a versatile but minimalist setup. If you wanted more features you'd be looking at the Ultra Lead instead. // 8

Sound and Feel: This has a very distinctive voicing compared to other amps I've played through. Very full and powerful, but not a loose bottom end like a SLO for example. Tight and articulate, but not as dry as I was expecting from reviews. It does maintain really good articulation and never feels oversaturated and it tracks really well, but I say it's not dry because it depends on how you play it. It has the ability to go from clean arpeggios to hard rock crunch just from changing the pick attack. I can't believe I may have found a more dynamic amp than a NMV Marshall. That is exactly what I was hoping for in buying this amp. I love the sound of the SLO 100 for example but on the overdrive channel it never did the chimey cleanup I wanted, but the Deliverance can easily. However, the Deliverance never goes into full "Liquid Lead" saturation like the SLO can, even with a boost in my experience. It's fine for lead work but I think it excels in rhythm tones or percussive type playing and requires a disciplined picking hand to get the most out of it.

The clean tones are great as well, not Fender Blackface style, bolder but still chimey with plenty of high end. Cleaning up with the volume knob yields these tones as well. This is the primary reason I went with the Series II and not the Series II+. I wanted the ability to cleanup with the volume knob, but have a great mid gain sound that can be kicked into overdrive. This amp can do all of that better than most 2+ channel amps. The Series II+ removes the Gain II from the circuit entirely unless the More mode is activated, making it more of a true two channel amp with more dedicated cleans than I need and less flexibility between mid and higher gain.

So how does the amp sit in the mix? I expected slightly better to be honest. I have it dialed in on the bright side; Treble at 2:00, Mids at 2:00, Presence at 1:00, which it never gets piercing, thin, or shrill. However, it does feel a little darker in a mix. The mids are focused a little lower than I'm used to, and I'm sure I'll adjust to that, it's just different and not quite as prominent as say a JCM800.

As far as cabs, I've been primarily playing it through a Friedman 412 with Greenbacks up top and V30s on bottom. Of the cabs I have this one does sound the best with the head. I don't think Greenbacks are the best fit and speakers with more open bottom ends help give it a fuller sound, V30s and T75s for example.

Overall, an amazingly dynamic amp with a unique and complex voicing, although I do miss a little more aggressive bite and the higher mids in a mix // 8

Reliability and Durability: I mentioned I'd talk about the KT88s later. Well I received the amp about a week ago, played it for a couple days and the DC Fuse blew. I'd checked all the tubes to make sure they were seated and it was playing great for a couple days. Got a replacement fuse put in and played great for another day, then the next day when I turned the amp on, the fuse blew again. Most likely an indication of power tubes going bad. Not necessarily a fault of the amp, at least it seems at this point, but seems like KT88s have a reputation of not being reliable. So I guess that's something I'll have to continue to deal with or worry about. It does make me feel like I wouldn't trust this for a gig at this point. // 6

Final Thoughts: Extremely fun amp to play. Pretty unique voicing, I guess this would be considered the "Fryette" sound. Close enough to Marshall tones to feel familiar but much more gain and tightness that allow much more flexibility. One of my favorite amps to play due to the dynamics. Doesn't exactly nail classic tones but is helping me reach outside my typical box a little more. Highly recommend this amp to dynamic players who love to ride the guitar volume and who prefer single channel amps. Extremely simple to dial in with a wide range of tones and none seem too extreme to be usable. // 8
 

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Yeah, sorry, I know it got a little long winded but nice to get all the thoughts out to revisit later and see how feeling have changed.
Don't mind him. You explained it well. Some people want a lot of depth. I didn't give the deliverance much of a chance, though I had waited years and years to try one. I was playing a lot of high gain amp heads and when i plugged into the deliverance, I was completely underwhelmed and never looked back. I think a little more time with it could be cool.

I see that you have a silver jube. Now that amp can do everything I want with just a boost pedal. Very underrrated amp.
 
Don't mind him. You explained it well. Some people want a lot of depth. I didn't give the deliverance much of a chance, though I had waited years and years to try one. I was playing a lot of high gain amp heads and when i plugged into the deliverance, I was completely underwhelmed and never looked back. I think a little more time with it could be cool.

I see that you have a silver jube. Now that amp can do everything I want with just a boost pedal. Very underrrated amp.
When I come back to the Jube after a bit, it's always a nice surprise at how much it can do.
 
I found a picture of all the amps we were playing that day, just to see if it was a version II or not.
henson ii.jpg

Unfortunately, I can't find the original pic..just this one that I modified as a joke. But the @ChuggNorris is covering up a ground zero hellion i believe
 
Amazing selection there. Any favorites that stick out?
So. We all played the jubilee for a long time, and were all suprised at how great it was. When we plugged into the big boys, it got left behind. But if you don't play it in same room as those, it will definitely never disappoint.

The white head on the floor was a ground zero Moab. It was a very good sounding amp. And had punch for days. Very tight, but not overly tight. The Bogner uber ultra was an awesome amp. Obviously, I am a little biased because of the voicing, but the MGL is unbeaten for me as of yet. However, Matt boosted his Wizard McII and it was very close to the mgl. Maybe you couldn't tell difference if you closed your eyes. Matt has a Wizard that he is a little secretive about. It could be a heavily custom MTL or Hellraiser. But it was a badass fucking amp, too. And of course, there was a mark iv that hung with all of them.
 
I found a picture of all the amps we were playing that day, just to see if it was a version II or not.
View attachment 388658
Unfortunately, I can't find the original pic..just this one that I modified as a joke. But the @ChuggNorris is covering up a ground zero hellion i believe


Even when I'm not around....

I'm always around....


💀


#neverforget
 
What brand KT88's did it ship with?

I have a 4xKT88 powered Matamp loaded with Gold Lion KT88's that I've ran at max master settings while getting slammed with a huge fuzz tone (usually using a Mesa Powerhouse Attenuator to bring it down some), and they have always fired up just fine every time.

If you end up having to retube it I cannot recommend them enough. I used their KT66's in a Rt. 66 head also, and again they sounded amazing when cranked up, and gave me no problems at all.
 
What brand KT88's did it ship with?

I have a 4xKT88 powered Matamp loaded with Gold Lion KT88's that I've ran at max master settings while getting slammed with a huge fuzz tone (usually using a Mesa Powerhouse Attenuator to bring it down some), and they have always fired up just fine every time.

If you end up having to retube it I cannot recommend them enough. I used their KT66's in a Rt. 66 head also, and again they sounded amazing when cranked up, and gave me no problems at all.


Your mom.






💯
 
What brand KT88's did it ship with?

I have a 4xKT88 powered Matamp loaded with Gold Lion KT88's that I've ran at max master settings while getting slammed with a huge fuzz tone (usually using a Mesa Powerhouse Attenuator to bring it down some), and they have always fired up just fine every time.

If you end up having to retube it I cannot recommend them enough. I used their KT66's in a Rt. 66 head also, and again they sounded amazing when cranked up, and gave me no problems at all.
I wish I would've saw your recommendation before I order some replacement EXH KT88s a few days ago. Just got them in and they sound really good. From what I saw online most people preferred the EHX sound to the Gold Lions.
 
It was Sovteks stock though to answer your initial question. Biased the new tubes to around 25W, seemed to be a lot of disagreements on whether KT88EHs should be biased at 35W or 42W dissipation.
 
Nice review. I am in about the same camp as you. I have a 60s Marshall 1959 and have had the urge to check out SLOs and a Deliverance. I have played plenty of SLOs to know I love them, but I am also a single channel volume rider and every clip I hear of the Deliverance just sounds on point.
 
Nice review. I am in about the same camp as you. I have a 60s Marshall 1959 and have had the urge to check out SLOs and a Deliverance. I have played plenty of SLOs to know I love them, but I am also a single channel volume rider and every clip I hear of the Deliverance just sounds on point.
Thanks. Yeah the Deliverance is ridiculously good with cleanup. That's my main disappointment with the SLO is I miss that chimey or sparkly cleanup because it never gets clean, unless you're on the crunch channel then it doesn't get mean enough.
 
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