#1
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Blues Jr IV or 68 Vibro Champ
Hi again,
I owned a BJR years ago... I recently started getting electric again, and bought a Fender Champ 20 because it was cheap. I am returning it, and thinking of the above two models. Which do you like and why? Issues with each? Thank you! |
#2
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I had trouble finding a Vibro Champ in-stock, except for Guitar Center floor samples, or full MAP off of Fender's website. I ended up with a Tonemaster Deluxe Reverb, which at the same weight as the Vibro Champ, is much more versatile. The tone is outstanding nailing the original, to my ear, and having the benefit of a backside power control.
The Blues Jr is another good choice and could keep up with a drummer where the Champ might be unable to hit a clean rhythm tone at that volume level.
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jf45ir Free DIY Acoustic Guitar IR Generator .wav file, 30 seconds, pickup left, mic right, open position strumming best...send to direct email below I'll send you 100/0, 75/25, 50/50 & 0/100 IR/Bypass IRs IR Demo, read the description too: https://youtu.be/SELEE4yugjE My duo's website and my email... [email protected] Jon Fields |
#3
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Thank you Jon...
Both of these amps are definitely pricey, I am sadly just discovering what a new black hole the World of Amps are. You can spend $5k..... sick. |
#4
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Depends on what you play and how you play and it what context and then on to personal taste. So it's hard to say.
I used to play with a fine player who used an original generation Blues Jr. It sounded OK to me, but he never felt it had the Fender mid-scroop bright and tight sound he wanted as his clean tone. I think I convinced him to go with a Princeton back in the day when the originals were still affordable (I played then with a pre-CBS non-reverb Princeton.) Champs can be a lot of fun at the right volume. Cranked they always get a little rough, at least through the typical small speakers they come with. I have no experience with the current Vibro Champ. I still have a Champ 600 (a "TV front" style combo that was offered closer to the turn of the century.) I never found much use for it with the supplied speaker. When I do use it, I essentially use it as small "head" into a external speaker cabinet. I'm prejudiced toward the Princeton myself. More clean overhead, less speaker breakup when pushed. The person above who mentioned the Tonemaster line has a worthwhile suggestion as the attenuator-set volume and weight of those are in Champ/Princeton territory (or even below!) but with enough clean power and speaker to get louder if needed. If cheap and cheerful, small, and light are the thing you seek the "modeling to tube power section" the Fender Super Champ is nifty package at a low price. Don't let the "modeling" stop you if you are one of those afraid of options as there's a dead simple straightaway channel 1 and the modeling channel is a single Fender skirted and numbered knob to change pre-amp character. I believe it may be recently dropped from Fender's line, but used examples are out there. The two you started off with are good amps. Either might please you, or not. I can't tell. If you can't shop you may have to resort to catch and release to see what fits your style, taste, and needs.
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----------------------------------- Creator of The Parlando Project Guitars: 20th Century Seagull S6-12, S6 Folk, Seagull M6; '00 Guild JF30-12, '01 Martin 00-15, '16 Martin 000-17, '07 Parkwood PW510, Epiphone Biscuit resonator, Merlin Dulcimer, and various electric guitars, basses.... |
#5
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Personally, I'd go with something else, entirely, but between those two choices, I'd go with the BJ.
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#6
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FWIW, I think the Traynor YCV20WR sounds better than the Blues Junior.
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#7
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Thanks gents. I like that the amps mentioned here are made in North America too.
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#8
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Quote:
For something made in the USA I'd get another Swart. http://swartamps.com
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#9
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I bought a Blues Jr IV today. This thing is loud! It’s overkill for the home, but frankly I like that. And I have options for public play down the road.
Anyways, playing a Tele style guitar through the JR, I get great clean tone. And when I go through a Bose Blues Driver overdrive pedal and a Boss Compressor Sustainer, I feel like I’m a Guitar Hero. Very happy with the amp, and thanks all. I bet I’d be happy with the Vibro Champ as well, but the price was right on this one. Last edited by SalFromChatham; 09-12-2021 at 03:21 AM. |
#10
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Quote:
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