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Clapton asked Jim Marshall to produce a combo amplifier with tremolo, which would fit in the boot of his car, and one of the most famous Marshall amps was born, the "Bluesbreaker" amp. [7] This is the amplifier, in tandem with his 1960 Gibson Les Paul Standard (the "Beano"), that gave Clapton that famous tone on the John Mayall & the ...
Marshall Major This page was last edited on 24 September 2017, at 22:14 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
The amplifier was reissued for the first time in 1988 (the 1959S), and again from 1991 to 1993 (the 1959X) and from 1993 to 1995 (the 1959SLP). [1] The SLP continued after 1995 but in 2000 Marshall added modifications to lower the noise floor (hum balance pot), reverted the negative feedback resistor to the 1968-69 value of 47 kΩ, and added an effects loop.
Marshall reissued the 2×12" Bluesbreaker [1] in 1989; the 4×10" was never reissued. [7] This version used 6L6 tubes. [7] [10] A reissue called the 1962 Bluebreaker was available in the 2000s and used 5881 power tubes. [11] An amplifier head, the 2245THW, was reissued in Marshall's "Handwired" series, with circuitry identical to the Bluesbreaker.
Power attenuator (THD Hot Plate) on Marshall 1959 Super Lead Plexi. A power attenuator, used with a guitar amplifier, is a type of attenuator that diverts and dissipates a portion of the amplifier's power to enable hearing the amplifiers high-volume characteristics at lower volume.
Marshall amplifiers (7 P) Mesa/Boogie (4 P) P. ... Pages in category "Guitar amplifier manufacturers" The following 93 pages are in this category, out of 93 total.
The JCM800 series (Models 2203, 2204, 2205, and 2210) is a line of guitar amplifiers made by Marshall Amplification.The series was introduced in 1981. Although models 1959 and 1987 had been in production since 1965 and the 2203 and 2204 had been in production since 1975, they were redesigned and introduced as JCM800 amplifiers in 1981.
The Marshall Major (Model 1967 [1]) was a bass guitar amplifier made by Marshall. It was introduced in 1967 as the "Marshall 200" (in reference to the power of the amplifier). It had a plexi panel and two inputs in one channel, but in contrast with the 100 watt heads made by Marshall, the first series had split tone controls similar to the ...