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Vox AC30 Normal Bass JMI 1964
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  • iamqmaniamqman

    No different

    Vox AC30 Normal Bass JMI 1964Published on 06/26/11 at 17:00
    JMI was the Vox to have hear in the latest vintage crazy. They are harder to come by now a days as many of them failed to stay together working. The thing about the early AC30's was that they had one switch to turn the amp on a ready to play. Today we see that every amp has a power switch and then a standby switch. This keeps the amp from breaking down with everything going on at one time. Nonetheless, this amp is an amazing creation of tone.

    This is the amp that was basically the first creation, the amp that was without top boost. The top boost came around 65 I believe.

    The great thing about this amp is that it has a familiar British flavor but vastly different from the British soun…
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    JMI was the Vox to have hear in the latest vintage crazy. They are harder to come by now a days as many of them failed to stay together working. The thing about the early AC30's was that they had one switch to turn the amp on a ready to play. Today we see that every amp has a power switch and then a standby switch. This keeps the amp from breaking down with everything going on at one time. Nonetheless, this amp is an amazing creation of tone.

    This is the amp that was basically the first creation, the amp that was without top boost. The top boost came around 65 I believe.

    The great thing about this amp is that it has a familiar British flavor but vastly different from the British sounds of a Marshall or a Hiwatt. The grind from this amp is very unique and voiced much like a Fender Twin, but deeper tonally and much darker than a Fender Twin.

    UTILIZATION


    The operation is unique to this amp as well. It doesn't look anything like a Marshall or a Hiwatt front panels. The gain control knob is the Cut knob. This is where you get the gain from the amp but you have to get the power section working hard to get any kind of distortion from the amp. This means you have to blast the hell out of this amp to get it to sustain. Which won't sounds very pleasing to any neighbors you may have living next door to you. If you want to get that Brian May tone then I would recommend getting an attenuator so you can crank that volume up to get a power tube distortion. There really isn't much if any preamp distortion at all with the amp.


    SOUNDS


    If this is the sound that you are going for then there really is not anything better out there. There haven't been too many clone amps of the Vox Ac30 so you are quite limited in trying to obtain that vintage sound from the 60's. JMI has been reissuing the Ac30's but they are around $5000 for a new one. For that price you might as well throw down the money for a vintage one.

    I used this with a Fender Strat and a Les Paul. Each one of those guitars gave a very usable and tasty flavor. For the clean stuff the Strat was optimum and for throwing an overdrive pedal in front the Les Paul gave a solid warm and rich vintage tone. However, the best operation I found was my personal favorite: a Electro Harmonics Big Muff in front with a Fender Strat. This combination gave me a great 60's tone that was so enjoyable to play.

    OVERALL OPINION

    If you are going for a particular tone then the Vox isn't going to be it. If you are going for a Vox or Brian May tone then there is only one way to go. You will need to get a JMI/ Jennings Music Industries Vox AC0 amp. This amp has a unique tone which is only Vox.

    I would recommend this amp to anyone looking for that Vox tone or any music or record engineer who needs a good arsenal or tones. You can't make a Marshall sound like this amp and you can't make this amp sound like a Marshall.
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