carltonh
08-29-2005 |
“This
is a 2+ year review. Honeymoon is long over, unless they
can last forever. I’m still impressed more than
ever. This amp probably has more features and perfect
tones than any other amp I’ve ever played or heard,
but if I’m going to complain about something, then
it would be that I can’t use my 16 ohm 4x12, and
without a stereo 1/4" adapter to use the non-mono
ring, you can’t do straight 8 ohms either. The watts
knob is a great attenuator that doesn’t compromise
tone, though at the minimum setting, you’d want
to compensate by increasing the treble slightly. The “practice
input” does compromise the tone some, but this attenuates
to speaking tone volume and I just practice with the “gig
input” with watts at minimum. “I
have tried most of Pritchard’s different cabinets
and own the 1x12 TB (Tunnel Back™). My favorite was
the 1x15 TB which uses an Eminence Legend 151, probably
the best 15 in production (or out of production) that
I’ve heard. The Pritchard in that cab can do
absolutely everything without the slightest compromise.
My 1x12 TB is about 35 lbs and perfectly portable.
It’s speaker is a custom version of a Legend
V12. Even if you think you may not like the V12, in
this amp and cab it is incredible (Even ask David
Barber about the V12). But it does lack a little of
the sparkle available in other cabs and speakers.
It tends to make a 1x12 TB sound like a 4x12 closed
back. Basically anyone who likes closed back cabs
already wouldn’t think the Pritchard 1x12 TB
lacks necessary sparkle. I didn’t care as much
for the Pritchard 1x12 closed back, even though it
sounds great for thick crunch tones, just because
it doesn’t sound as good with clean tones, and
Pritchard amps, to me, is all about tons of great
tones without compromise to any of them. The 4x10
TB is absolutely killer for blues and everything unless
you want to do palm mute high gain riffs on the low
E string, which I do.
“The
M (Marshall voice) is my favorite, and my standard
starting tone. I can max the boost and get an old
vintage Metallica tone (but remember, this is a non-master
volume amp!) and then roll down my guitar volume and
get such sweet and harmonically rich clean tones.
It is unbelievable the range of tones that stay great
just by guitar volume knob. EVH rolled down his guitar
volume for his cleans, but they weren’t anywhere
near this good with the same technique. You can get
great EVH tones here as well, I’d say closer
to VH 1&2 than EVH got with Peavey and Soldano
amps. The F voice gets from BF to tweed Fender tones
just by how you set the volume and midrange controls,
and gets them both quite convincingly, though you
can’t set the bass very high or it is capable
of farting out, just like vintage Fenders, because
the F voice is designed to replicate their circuits
that closely. I stick to the old magic sixes trick
and it is not a problem. The S voice is sort of a
extra-harmonically rich twin, but not quite blackface
or tweed. I use it for Steve Howe of Yes type stuff
and it works great. Others use it for jazz, but I
won’t pretend to be able to play jazz.
“I
also like the H voice. Initially this was designed
to be a type of high gain voice, as it has the designed
tonal effect of running 2 Marshall preamps in a row.
However, it effectively makes a high frequency emphasis
and at clean settings has this great almost lo-fi
EQing to it that immediately brought to mind Pink
Floyd’s Piper at the Gates of Dawn. I loved
that tone, but had to look up what amp Barrett used.
So turns out, the Pritchard can sound like a great
Selmer Treble & Bass, and this is a cool tone
to have, for those of you who know that album. In
fact, I’m not sure of another current production
amp that can get that tone. The V voice is fun, but
at least with my 1x12 and current 12, it can’t
sound like a vintage AC30 through Celestion Blues.
A friend did bring over his Hellhound one time, which
he used to get the “Voxiest” sound he
could afford. He set the Hellhound up to his stage
settings and volume, and then we set the Pritchard
up to match the Hellhound, and did so, so closely
that he couldn’t tell which was which, then
we tweeked the Pritchard a little and made it so much
better than the Hellhound for the tone he was trying
to get.
“I
also use the L voice to get smooth or aggressive sustaining
high gain tones from Vai to Dream Theater, but this
(remember the Satori is a non-master volume amp) still
has slightly less bite than Dream Theater/Petrucci
uses. Believe it or not, after 2 years I still haven’t
used the other voices much. There’s just so
much to try on the voices I focus on. I’ve heard
other people experiment with the other voices for
their styles and sound unbelievable. I’ve still
only tried just a few pedals, but hardly ever. I’ve
just been going direct to amp. (Oh and the direct
out from the amp to a board or PA is so good it isn’t
funny, and my V-stack Classic (to be sold) isn’t
even in the same ballpark for DI.) The Pritchard has
both serial and parallel FX loops, and I still haven’t
bothered to try them. The reverb is good and useful,
though I’ve probably heard a few better as I
like ‘em springy. Supposedly Eric Pritchard
currently has his amps where you can have the reverb
only on one channel and switching channels could turn
it off automatically for your gain channel if you
so want. That’s cool because the 2 button pedal
is only for channel switching and for the boost on
each channel, but I think my older amp doesn’t
have that option.
“The
only draw back to the Sword of Satori not already
mentioned is that by having 2 non-master volume channels,
you have a limit on the relative gain of them. However,
you can get a pretty high gain on one channel and
a pretty clean tone on the other to be equal volume
due to different preamp voicings. Just don’t
expect to get the extreme gain and pure clean tones
of equal volume that some heavy metal bands use. For
that maybe the Pritchard Estoc would work, but I’ve
only played one of them just a little bit, not enough
to have an opinion on its differences. (I did have
a Black Dagger for a couple months before I just HAD
to trade up to the Sword of Satori.)
“To
compare the Pritchard amp to other SS amps or even
digital amps is apples to oranges. I cannot stand
any Line 6 product I’ve ever tried, which is
all their amps and PODs. I don’t like any Tech
21, which all sound fake. (Perhaps the problem with
all of these is I really REALLY want my vintage tones
to be absolutely real, and those aren’t 100%,
and even 99% is no better then 0% if it can only annoy
you.) I like the Lab Series amps only over a very
limited range, not when they are pushed into noticeable
gain. I haven’t got to try a Pearce or Blue
Tone amp yet, but hope to eventually.
“One
other thing, cause I’m not sure if it is now
standard, or something he just did for mine and on
request. But he has a noise gate, even though this
amp is not noisier than any other good amp, but originally
when he first released the amps, the noise gate would
be noticeable if you had the boost on and rolled down
your guitar volume “too far” for playing
clean and played softly. That problem is completely
fixed on mine when I play cleans through the guitar
volume knob. If any one buys one, ask him about this.
[Carlton’s mod is standard now.]
“Anyway,
I hope that other people can test one out thoroughly
for themselves. It seems lonely being the only Pritchard
owner posting here. I know there were two others,
but perhaps their Pritchard amps cured them of the
desire to discuss on forms instead of play. (Happy
Face) Maybe I’m the oddball Pritchard owner
who hasn’t been cured of the Gear Page? Makes
me think, although I have only scratched the surface
of this amp in explanation....” |
carltonh
09-07-2005 |
“Clean
channel, which one is that? (Another Happy Face) I
joke because either one could be set up as the clean
channel.
“Actually,
with the Pritchard layout, I’d say the V (Voxy)
voice, H, and A voices can get pretty chimey. Still
haven’t got to do a side by side with a Vox
or Matchless, but some people consider the Hellhound
a somewhat budget boutique amp to get a chimey tone.
I had my 1 x 12 TB Pritchard side by side with the
Hellhound (with Alltone 1250) and the Pritchard was
capable of significantly more chimey tone than that.
Also, the M voice can get that 18-watt Marshall chimey
sound in the right settings too.
“That
said, if you want the most chimey, the 4 x 10 with
Alnico 10's or the 1 x 15 TB would work great. (Despite
that you wouldn’t think of 15's for that.) The
1 x 12 TB is not bad at all, but I wouldn’t
expect it to sound like a Vox through Celestian Blues,
but probably a lot like a Vox through Greenbacks.
Avoid the closed back combo for the most chime.”
|
carltonh
09-09-2005 |
Carlton’s
reply: “I think the Pritchard amps have a definite
‘raw’ EL34 sound. You know how you can
tell the different sweetnesses in the power sections
of different amps? I contrast ‘raw’ and
‘refined’ as to the nature of power amps,
and both types can be extremely good. If a 100-watt
Fuchs has a very refined sounding power amp, and the
Tweed Fenders have very raw sounding power amps, then
the Pritchard is much closer to Tweed Fender rawness,
and similiar to 1960's Marshalls. I’m not as
knowledgeable about KT66 amps, as the Rt. 66 is the
only such amp I’ve played, but the Pritchard
is definitely on the rich end of this type of tone.
You can’t get the Pritchard’s sound with
just average EL34's even in a very good amp.
“So
you can definitely get those vintage 60's Marshall
tones at an extreme range of volumes, and is extremely
sweet at extreme range of gain settings. All you have
to do is set the voice to M, start with the tone knobs
at 12 and adjust to need. You don’t have to
mike it as it sounds great anywhere from bedroom to
outdoor settings and volumes.
“With
my SOS [Sword of Satori], I can hang with a Fender
Twin in volume or with a Fender Champ, and it comes
alive at both volumes.”
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