I am building a clone of the Fender Princeton guitar amp. I was just wondering if it would be suitable for listening to recorded audio with, or will it not be "tuned" for that?
Guitar amps do often have OPTs that rolls off higher in frequency than normal stereo equipment. And more important: the usual tone controls of these amps are not very suitable for Hi-Fi...
elementx said:I am building a clone of the Fender Princeton guitar amp. I was just wondering if it would be suitable for listening to recorded audio with, or will it not be "tuned" for that?
Whew... no man. They are great sounding little guitar amps, but the freq response on those is purposely limites to 150Hz - 15kHz, with lots of purposefill non linear stages and midrange coloration. On the other hand, slap a TMB guitar tone stack on a hi-fi amp...like an old Citation for example... and you can get some great sparkly clean tones.
Remember that a stereo is there to REproduce sound, while a guitar amp is there to PROduce sound. The guitar amp is part of the instrument, that is why you select an Fender or a MArshall or whatever depending on the tone you want. It is anything but flat.
Seriously though, 1 channel A dynaco St-70 is not too much more involved than a Princeton, and they don't sound too bad for clean guitar or as a monoblock... nice and warm.
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