SQUAREHEAD
Well-known member
ANY amp that is marked up more than 150% the sum of it's parts an labor
150% ??
… some are more like 5-600%
ANY amp that is marked up more than 150% the sum of it's parts an labor
150% ??
… some are more like 5-600%
I mean, compared to the "parts and labor" food is probably "marked up" more than guitar amps lol
So it seems a little odd to pick that hill to die on
I worked at several restaurants. Food cost is usually about 17%. Labor is usually about 17%. That puts us at 34% for material and labor.
Not a fan at all. I prefer them when someone else is playing them. I find them to be bloated and stiff, with a cardboard like tone. I especially dislike their feel.
I also disliked the Lil Fokker, couldn’t get that fokker out of my house fast enough. This guy in not a Diezel guy.
Never played the vh4. Heard amazing things. Vh2 was a great amp though. Would absolutely love to try the bigmaxDon’t think I’ve ever been so let down as when I finally got the mighty VH4. Excitement levels were so damn high. Comedown was quick and rough. Tough lesson to learn - $$ doesn’t equal tone.
Never played the vh4. Heard amazing things. Vu2 was a great amp though. Would absolutely love to try the bigmax
Just saw i have vu2 in your reply..jesus. fucking phonesI've never played a Hagen, always thought they sounded interesting
Amps that have great feel/touch sensitivity, mostly tend to make you work a little harder. But when you spend more time with them, I feel that your playing improves because you're forced to up your game a little. Vintage Fenders, some Mesas(Mark IIs), old Marshalls, Wizards, SLOs, VHT/Fryettes, even the Naylors to some extent have this commonality. Others I'm sure but those are the ones I've had experience with.If I get 9 out of 10 chicks off though, or only this one amp is giving me problems, is it my technique that’s the problem or that chick is just a dead fish and the amp is stiff? I’d argue playing an unforgiving amp might not help in the long run, when all you’re focusing on is technique I think your playing becomes stiff, gotta learn to swing a little too
This 100%. Even with an OD pedal in front of a Marshall you still have to be able to control the dynamics or your playing sounds like a nails on a blackboard.Amps that have great feel/touch sensitivity, mostly tend to make you work a little harder. But when you spend more time with them, I feel that your playing improves because you're forced to up your game a little. Vintage Fenders, some Mesas(Mark IIs), old Marshalls, Wizards, SLOs, VHT/Fryettes, even the Naylors to some extent have this commonality. Others I'm sure but those are the ones I've had experience with.
Pretty well my answer exactly. Now, I do think the 2C+ is a fantastic amp....but there is no way it is multiple levels above what my MKIV is. In some areas, the I think the MKIV is better than the 2C+.The obvious answer is the completely over glorified and massively inflated clout, the 2c+. Not just because a boosted rectifier does everything it does but WAY better, but because the internet has deemed it into the end all be all. It’s a turd.
Honorable mention: Friedman amps. Dark, soft, everything that made Marshall great and removed it all.
Surprised to see KSR mentioned here, guess it’s time to make some CLIPZZZZZ
I mean, I own a IIc+ and think it’s overrated… I totally wouldn’t pay what people are asking.Pretty well my answer exactly. Now, I do think the 2C+ is a fantastic amp....but there is no way it is multiple levels above what my MKIV is. In some areas, the I think the MKIV is better than the 2C+.
I think this is pretty accurate. They are amazing amps. But no way I am spending that much on one when my MKIV gets me 95% of the way there.I mean, I own a IIc+ and think it’s overrated… I totally wouldn’t pay what people are asking.