The Amp and Cab Switch I Didn’t Know Existed

How It Starts

At some point every electric guitarist these days stumbles across the amazing studio musicians that create content for YouTube. Just watch Tim Pierce, RJ Ronquillo or Pete Thorn and you’ll soon have amp fever, lusting after their quick multi-head amp switching systems. After my experiments with various cabs, leading to my decision to go with all head and cab amps instead of combos, I started looking at these switching systems.

At the same time I am a huge fan and constant watcher of That Pedal Show, where Dan and Mick have taught me about the joy that is a wet/dry rig. Having one amp run all the gain pedals and another running gain plus all the time and modulation effects gives a huge soundstage that doesn’t wash out you main tone. Trying different combinations of amps for each role has led to some very interesting and inspiring tones that would not have been otherwise possible.

The Problem with Most Switchers

But this has led to a bit of a problem. All of the top amp/cab switcher are pretty much mono, and even running 2 of them would mean having to split my amps into two groups ahead of time (I don’t have many amps, so that would make it pretty pointless). Just as I was about to bite the bullet and go full mono from now on, I came across a brand I’d never heard of before in a forum post.

De Lisle to the Rescue

De Lisle makes a number of switching solutions, some more basic than the often-proposed devices. In fact, the amp and cab switched I ended up with is a fully passive device that simply lets you switch any of the 8 cabs to any of the 8 amps. Its only safety measure is a passive load that protects an amp if it’s not connected to a speaker, but even then, only if you don’t send a signal to the amp.

So it’s not fancy, doesn’t have midi control and won’t let you swap between a bunch of amps while playing to try out various tones. What it does do is let me set any amp that is connect to any cabs that are connected. If the amp could handle it, I could run all 8 cabs to one amp. More importantly, I can run any amp to any cab at the same time, making any wet/dry combination possible without having to go behind and re-wire my cabs.

Not only has this wonderful device made experimenting more fun and easy, it’s also breathed new life into my Mesa Boogie Triple Crown as I play it way more often now that I don’t have to hook it up every time I want to play it.

Which only leaves one last question, which head should I buy next. Ok, maybe that one is already answered as well.

Buy a De Lisle Amp Switcher on Reverb and support us by using our affiliate links.

Will the PRS J-MOD 100 overwhelm me with joy?

A collaboration between John Mayer and Paul Reed Smith, the J-MOD 100 was originally born from a need for an amp to take on John’s Dead and Company Tour. Once over, they went back with the prototypes and refined the amp to be an amp to end the search for amps. A lofty goal indeed, especially when Mayer himself reports on his own GAS (gear acquisition syndrome) saying he’s like all other guitar players collection and swapping gear constantly.

At $5,990 for just the head, this is by far not a cheap amp but can it be your last amp? To cut to the end, for me, no it cannot. However it isn’t going anywhere anytime soon as it is probably my ideal second amp, so lets take a look and see what the J-MOD 100 offers and where it comes up short.

Paul Reed Smith J-MOD 100 John Mayer Signature Amp

When you watch the videos of Paul and John’s release of the amp, and all the demos that came with it, you typically hear two main points be emphasized. They are that the amp is a lot quieter than expected and the “bounce” that John regards so highly with the amp. After playing the amp for a bit I can say that they are definitely both true statements, and are actually closely related.

100 watts of all tube power is typically an ear popping experience that is largely innapropriate for home use, or means you just tickle the volume on to keep from going deaf or annoying the neighbors. But with this amp, you find yourself turning it up way more than would seem reasonable looking at the knob. In comparison, with the J-MOD turned up to half way, I would only need to turn my 40 watt Two-Rock Bloomfield drive combo up to less than a quarter to reach the same volume. And it’s not all down to the pots with the volume jumping in huge leaps in the second half of travel, it’s relatively quiet all the way up.

So where are all those watts going? Are they just getting wasted, turned to hear in inefficient tube layouts? Not at all, all of those watts are going to the “bounce” we have heard so much about. You see, Paul and his team have managed to pack an insane amount of bass end into this amp and cab, and many of those watts are being used to support that bottom end to allow it to respond as quickly as the rest of the frequencies. There really is a bounce, an urgency, or a cleanliness to the bass response that seem to never flub out regardless of how high the volume or bass eq is turned.

But it’s not all good. Balancing the overdrive setting with the clean is a difficult process almost always ends in some compromise, much like early Mesa Boogie amps. Often the gain levels in the overdrive “channel” (not really a channel, but another switchable gain stage) are more than I’d want with just enough volume to make up for a low gain setting. It’s not to say I’ve found any setting that didn’t work, it’s just that I’m often right at the end of the pot’s travel with no room left “just in case” I wanted more.

Lastly, I understand that John doesn’t need a reverb built into the amp with his Bricasti near by, but for those of us with a standard pedalboard and no rack effects, it necessitates an awkward decision of either running long cables to put a single pedal in the effects loop, or a separate power supply for one pedal to sit on the amp. This to me, is the main reason why it could never be my only amp. Which is OK. Because it pairs perfectly with my Bloomfield 40 in a wet/dry rig that sounds fantastically epic at any volume, but especially sweet as your turn it up and feel that wonderful bouncy bass in your chest.

Bonus: The J-MOD 100 uses a 5 pin cable for it’s footswitch. If you want to use a pedal switcher (like a GigRig G3 or other similar ones) then you need to make a cable or converter to go from 1/4″ TRS to the 5 Pin connecter. Being the amazing company they are, PRS quickly replied to my questions and the amp tech drew this out to send to me.

Vox AC10C1

I’ll be honest, I never really got along with Vox amplifiers, too often they sounded thin and boring. Sure there were some vintage AC30s that sounded mint when you dimed them and their well broken in speakers were barely staying together. But all the lower, more reasonable wattage version, and even the new AC30s just sounded terrible. Honestly I’d rather have a rack effects unit running an AC30 simulation than the real thing!

And then on a whim I clicked on some YouTube demo videos Vox put out, just over a minute each in length with a Custom Shop red sparkle Stratocaster going through the newer Custom series AC10. There were all the Vox tones I had heard, loved and was never able to find.

IMG_20160817_111240

The new Custom version is master volume with a gain knob, so you can crank the gain to get the sweet singing overdrive of a dimed Vox without the bleeding ears. The EQ on the new amp consists of a Treble and Bass knob with a perfectly sweet fixed mid. Both knobs at noon give you the chime and sweetness, while dropping both to the 9 0’clock position gives you a gorgeous pushed mid that breaks up beautifully as you turn up the gain. the on board reverb is a digital “studio quality” unit that sounds good enough and has enough range to give you more than enough. A foot switch to be able to turn it off remotely would be nice but not expected at this price range.

Gone is the vibrato channel of the vintage model, but the gain and eq that replaced it is a more usable and enjoyable alternate. Plus who uses a Vox for vibrato? Looks IMG_20160817_111253
have been brought up to date and are beyond the price point, in fact I’ve had a few mentions of how nice it looks, even as it sits nestled between my Mark III Boogie and Two Rock Studio Pro. Go figure.

All in all this is a killer amp that begs for a simple setup. It is not an amp that loves all pedals equally like the Two Rock, but prefers simple pedals like treble boosters, fuzzes and echo. All the things that bring back the thoughts of the simpler years where it’s the guitar and the amp with very little in the middle. Plug in, use that guitar volume knob, and kick on a germanium boost when you need a bit more, and bask in the lush vintage gain.