I'm curious how'd you like the Landgraff?No way I'll remember them all:
ADA MP1
Marshall Jubilee 2555 (original)
Marshall 69 50watt
Marshall 67 100watt Tremolo
Mesa Dual Rectifier Solo Head
Mesa Tremoverb
Mesa iic+ DRG
Egnater TOL 100
Matchless C30
Bogner 100B
Bogner 100A
Naylor SD60
Fender 67 BF Deluxe
Fender 66 Pro Reverb
Soldano SLO 100
Two Rock K&M Custom
Carr 6V with Redplate mod OD channel
Kelley Reverb
Wizard MCII EL34 100watt
Wizard MCII KT75
Friedman Smallbox
Friedman BE100
Magic 5E3
Vox AC15tbx
Cornford MK50
Germino Club 40
Suhr SL68
Landgraff Custom 50
Quinn 100 watt D-style clone
I liked it at low to low-mid volume. It had very extended bass and I ran it with the switches in the back (can't remember what they were called) where they ran the preamp tubes in parallel like a matchless. It was very rich. Then I used a dual pedal he'd made for me with a dynamic overdrive and M'OD all in a dual pedal. I rarely used the M'OD and very much favored a distortion box he made for me which was awesome. All dirt from the pedals. It was a cool sound. The amp on it's own turned super mushy if you turned it up too much. Above 11 o'clock on the volume just turned to mush. Much like the EF86 channel on a Matchless (not voiced the same, but mushy the same). It was a cool amp and unique. I found it definitely a pedal amp. A lot of the options I didn't find a use for. It was superbly built and really quiet as far as noise. Not too loud. It was cool for what it did. I haven't pined for it after I sold it FWIW. However, there were tones in it that if that was THE tone you've been looking for it would be irreplaceable. It was definitely a unique amp. If you were interested in it, a try before you buy amp for sure. You may find exactly what you've been looking for or just walk away saying "Meh". I could see either as equally likely.I'm curious how'd you like the Landgraff?
Interesting! I appreciate the throrough description! Landgraff is one of the few amps I’ve not tried, but had a Mo-D pedal that was made by his wife after he died. Right now the only amp I have that uses EF86’s is my Xits Piper. I don’t find that amp mushy though. I’ve been exploring all the various old EF86’s and like best so far the Siemens and Telefunken’s, but have incoming also a Bugle Boy and GEC EF86I liked it at low to low-mid volume. It had very extended bass and I ran it with the switches in the back (can't remember what they were called) where they ran the preamp tubes in parallel like a matchless. It was very rich. Then I used a dual pedal he'd made for me with a dynamic overdrive and M'OD all in a dual pedal. I rarely used the M'OD and very much favored a distortion box he made for me which was awesome. All dirt from the pedals. It was a cool sound. The amp on it's own turned super mushy if you turned it up too much. Above 11 o'clock on the volume just turned to mush. Much like the EF86 channel on a Matchless (not voiced the same, but mushy the same). It was a cool amp and unique. I found it definitely a pedal amp. A lot of the options I didn't find a use for. It was superbly built and really quiet as far as noise. Not too loud. It was cool for what it did. I haven't pined for it after I sold it FWIW. However, there were tones in it that if that was THE tone you've been looking for it would be irreplaceable. It was definitely a unique amp. If you were interested in it, a try before you buy amp for sure. You may find exactly what you've been looking for or just walk away saying "Meh". I could see either as equally likely.