fender

Fender London Reverb - How Did This Happen?

Where to begin? The ribbon connector repaired with Cat5 cable? The solder pads that burn off with the slightest heat? Maybe the switches inside pots. Or the pots inside switches. The pot/switches that flip chips and relays three boards away. The two mid knobs on the second channel? An entire separate circuit just for the LEDs?! The cable that seems to only connect chassis ground to chassis ground?? What does this amp want from me?!?! Oh man, why don't you just stop it? This is too big for you, you know that? Who did this, who did that! It's a mystery! It's a mystery wrapped in a riddle inside an enigma! Fender don't even know, man! Don't you get it? You want the truth? YOU CAN'T HANDLE THE TRUTH!!

The 1980s were a weird time that made people do weird things. The Fender London Reverb is one of those weird things. I'm just glad I made it to the other side of this one. Was it worth it? Only me and the voice inside my coffee maker know for sure.

Fender Princeton Reverb - Ready For The Road

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This '78 Princeton Reverb just needed a little tightening up before it hit the road. I installed a grounded AC cable and removed the dreaded Fender "Death Cap." Everything needed a good cleaning inside and out, and the bias circuit was adjusted for its new power tubes. Its preamp tubes were the USA made originals, and like most tubes from the Cold War they still worked just fine... ok, better than fine.  A great little amp that makes traveling to the gig a breeze.

Fender HotRod DeVille - The 60 Watt Flame Thrower

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The old joke about the Hotrod series is that Fender installed a second on/off switch that they mislabeled "volume." At 1, the amp is basically off. At 2, it peels the paint off the walls. To make the amp a little more user friendly and bring the overall gain down we swapped 12AT7s into the first two preamp spots. We also replaced the "volume" and "master volume" pots with 250k audio taper. We replaced the "reverb" pot with 100k linear taper. The end result was a much more mellow tone with a nice warm reverb that you can turn up without sterilizing farm animals at 100 paces. 

'68 Fender Super Reverb - The Legend of Little Joe

At some point in the late 70s or early 80s there was a failed attempt at repairing Little Joe, so he was left in pieces in a cold wet garage. Where he sat, and waited... for decades.  When he was finally rescued by our friends in Casino Queen  they knew they had stumbled onto something cool, but how cool? How about 1968 Drip Edge Fender Super Reverb with original factory JBLs level of cool? How about all original American made RCA preamp tubes (that still test great) as bonus cool? With a lot of love, some late nights, and a gallon or two of mold killer a bell-like chime finally cut through the decades of grime and neglect. It turned out that some poor soldering skills in the power supply and a wrong (really wrong) fuse were what had forced Little Joe to live in the garage in the first place. The damp had caused some warping of one of the speaker cones, and there is a slight rub that is slowly getting better. Hopefully we can avoid a recone on this classic speaker, and Little Joe will go down as one of those legendary barn finds you tell your grandkids about. 

Fender Pro Tube "94 Twin" - Shaken, Not Stirred

The Fender Pro-Tube "94 Twin" is a feature heavy beast that was the result of some Fender engineer deciding that the regular Twin just didn't weigh enough. Seriously, I'm pretty sure the cabinet is made of lead reinforced concrete. This particular amp was having issues with it's power tubes. The customer reported lots of snap, crackle, pops, and he wasn't wrong. It had been re-tubed and biased in the past, but those tubes soon gave up as well. I pulled the chassis from the cabinet expecting a long haul, but the problem was revealed almost immediately. The mounting hardware on half of the power tubes was missing. When played, the cabinet vibration was causing those two tubes to flap around wildly. I replaced the missing screws and applied thread lock to all the socket mounts.  The amp didn't get any lighter, but it sure sounded better.

Fender Bassman 70 - A Little Goes A Long Way

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The customer had purchased this vintage Bassman 70 with plans to clean it up, and while it initially worked fine, once he got it home it would only produce noise. The source of the madness was a missing nut and washer on the bias control pot. Without the nut the pot was no longer making contact to the chassis/ground. One little bit of hardware had thrown off the whole amp. I locked down the pot and biased the new power tubes. I also gave the front panel pots a good cleaning. Some people don't care for Fender's ultra-linear amps, but this one had a nice solid clean tone that was exactly what the customer was looking for.