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  2. Guitar speaker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guitar_speaker

    Kustom 200 bass ampamp head and speakers, 100 watts RMS, two channels, on top of a speaker cabinet with two 15" speakers, 1971. A guitar speaker cabinet is typically a wooden box that contains one or more guitar speakers. The smallest guitar cabinets have one 6.5" or 8" speaker; these are usually practice amplifier units designed for ...

  3. Fender Harvard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fender_Harvard

    The "Tweed" 5F10 model, [2] launched in 1955, but not in time for the Fender catalog of that year, [3] was a 10-watt amplifier utilising a 6AV6 (from 1956 a 6AT6) preamplifier tube, 12AX7 phase inverter tube, [note 1] a pair of 6V6GT power amplifier tubes, and one 5Y3GT rectifier tube, [4] with a Jensen P10R 10-inch speaker. The amplifier had a ...

  4. Marshall Bluesbreaker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Bluesbreaker

    The Marshall Bluesbreaker is the popular name given to the Models 1961 and 1962 guitar amplifiers made by Marshall from 1964/65 to 1972.. The Bluesbreaker, which derives its nickname from being used by Eric Clapton with John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers, is credited with delivering "the sound that launched British blues-rock in the mid-1960s."

  5. Fender amplifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fender_amplifier

    The Princeton was a small six watt amp with an 8" Jensen field-coil speaker. This amp had no controls as it was designed for the guitar to solely control the volume and was simply turned on by plugging/unplugging into the wall plug. The Deluxe was a larger amp with a Jensen 10” field-coil speaker and five tubes in a 14-watt design.

  6. Fender Blues Junior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fender_Blues_Junior

    Fender Blues Junior front view. The Blues Junior is a tube guitar amplifier introduced in 1995 by the Fender Musical Instrument Corporation.It is aimed at achieving the warm, tube-driven tone common in many styles of American blues and blues rock dating back to the 1950s, while remaining both portable and affordable.

  7. Fender Deluxe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fender_Deluxe

    A 1953 Deluxe. The Fender Deluxe amp of the 1950s was a medium-powered unit designed to let guitarists "hold their own" in a small group. As blues, western swing, Western, and rockabilly bands began getting louder, the overdriven tone of a cranked-up Deluxe found its way onto many live and recorded performances.

  8. Fender Champ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fender_Champ

    The speaker was offered either with the standard Fender Blue Label, or optionally with a Fender-branded Electro-Voice EVI-10. Additionally, 100 Super Champ cabinets made of oak, fitted with EVI-10, having brown/champagne faceplate and knobs, and a special grille cloth were offered as part of the Super Pro Series.

  9. Fender Twin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fender_Twin

    1955 Twin-Amp, model 5E8. Dual rectifiers and 6L6 power tubes, twin 12" speakers. After the preceding looks of the early 1950s (TV front from 1950 to 51/2; wide panel '52–54), Leo Fender changed the cabinet design again, this time opting for no extra wood on the front of the amp, except for the narrow top and bottom panels that hold the baffle board to the cabinet.

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