The Truth About Vintage Amps with Skip Simmons
Amp tech Skip Simmons is once again fielding guitar tube amp questions from around the world.
Submit your question to Skip here: [email protected] or, better yet, leave us a voicemail or text at 509-557-0848.
(Apologies for the Skype noise/buffering at the start of the podcast... our small town internet needs some WD-40.)
21:39 This week’s sponsor: Grez Guitars (link) 22:33 A Musicmaster Bass amp in a Vibro Champ cabinet (and vice versa) 25:19 The crest on a Gibson Crestline-era Skylark / the Gibson amp book (link) 27:49 A resistor to bias a tweed Vibrolux; power transformers in a 5F2A 38:51 Using the speaker of a Deluxe Reverb with a Quilter head 42:34 A Silverface Vibro Champ with a weak tremolo; the Capacitor Wizard 47:55 This week’s quote: "The mind that is not baffled, is not employed" -Wendell Berry 49:19 The popping Fender Tonemaster update 55:01 A gridleak bias mindworm 1:02:06 In defense of Lodge cast iron; crisper potatoes 1:07:37 Pickups and how they interact with tube amps 1:11:59 Music recommendation: Skip James' Today!1:13:01 Free video time killers for the DIY set: Camel Finds Water (link), Resurrection: Rescue of a 1955 VW panelvan (link), The Beast of Turin (link) 1:16:56 Rogue Hoe gardening tools (link); symptoms of a bad bias circuit 1:23:46 Dialing in your tone on a Mesa Boogie Mark IV 1:30:58 Tubes for a Fender reverb tank 1:34:33 "Chitlins Con Carne" rhythm revisited: Timmy Thomas’ "Why Can’t We Live Together," the Police's "Deathwish;" Gibson Falcon mods 1:39:12 Modifying a '60s hi-fi home kit amp, plus Vinnie’s mashed potato recipe (see below) 1:48:17 Movie pick: 'Pow Wow Highway'
Keep the questions coming and please leave us a review over on Apple Podcasts or share the podcast with friends.
Vinnie's Mash Potato Recipe
500gm Floury potatoes (in New Zealand I'd use Agria) 300ml single cream 200gm butter salt nutmeg butter to finish
(if they over cook and take on water they will be too salty)
Maybe mash potato seems like a lame recipe, but this method produces the best results, I think.
p.s. water is the enemy of mash potato. Water out--Fat in