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The Standel Company is an American company that makes guitar amplifiers.It was founded in 1953 by Robert "Bob" Crooks in Temple City, California.Standel (a portmanteau of standard and electronics) was the name of Crooks' side-business of radio and hi-fi repair, located in his garage at 10661 Freer Street, Temple City, California.
The 5150 was based on the Soldano SLO-100 which Eddie Van Halen was using at the time and designed to provide high gain saturation as well as a clean channel. [5]While the product was designed around a centered printed circuit board (PCB), its cascading five preamps (actually four preamplifiers and one phase inverter) and four gain stages were implemented in a very simple manner.
1 Ukulele: 2 Open Nylon Guitar 3 Nylon Guitar 2: 26 0 Steel-String Guitar: 1 12-String Guitar: 2 Mandolin: 3 Steel + Body 27 0 Jazz Guitar: 1 Hawaiian Guitar: 28 0 Clean Electric Guitar: 1 Chorus Guitar: 2 Mid Tone Guitar 29 0 Muted Electric Guitar: 1 Funk Guitar 2 Funk Guitar 2 3 Jazz Man: 30 0 Overdriven Guitar: 1 Guitar Pinch 31 0 Distortion ...
The Dano '63 was also available as a long- and short-scale bass and a baritone guitar. The Amp-in-case amplifier has been redesigned and reissued in an amp head form by Fritz Brothers Guitars in Mendocino County, California. This new take on the original amp does not include the speaker, but can be run into a separate speaker cabinet, or ...
Cort KX500MS Star Dust Green -fanned fret / multi-scale -7-string electric guitar with EMG-pickups. A multi-scale fingerboard (also called multiple scale length fretboard [1]) is an instrument fretboard which incorporates multiple scale lengths. This allows each of the strings to have a different string tension and thus, balanced tonal ...
A guitar amplifier (or amp) is an electronic device or system that strengthens the electrical signal from a pickup on an electric guitar, bass guitar, or acoustic guitar so that it can produce sound through one or more loudspeakers, which are typically housed in a wooden cabinet.
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.