Duff
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2007
- Messages
- 777
- Reaction score
- 0
- City & State/Province
- South Williamsport, Pa. (on the Susquehanna River
Just got a SCXD and like it a lot.
It is light and puts out some quality sound. The clean channel is awesome with my Epi LPs with SD JB bridge pickups and Jazz neck on one and the best is the JB and
'59 on the other one.
I have two guitars with flat wound strings and Hot Rodded SDs on them that really sound good with this amp. The flat wound strings give that extra smooth tonality to what you play.
I have a lot to learn with this amp. It looks simple but it has depth to it that defies the generic descriptions and the apparent simplicity. There are tones to be had by tweaking the controls that are not like presets or anything. I have to work with the amp and explore to uncover superior tones lurking undiscovered.
It is a high quality build and looks vintage with the silver grill cloth and it could be easily overlooked as a FM series by someone leisurely passing. Or someone might wonder what that FM "x" sounds so good.
I now want to get an 8 ohm 4 by 12 cab. I can only imagine what it would sound like. My cabs are 16 ohms and the fender technicians told me to match it with an 8 ohm cabinet, don't mess around with a mismatch.
I also have a Tweed HRDx with Jensen P12N that rocks the neighborhood, not to mention the house. That'll get over a incessantly overloud drummer with no problem. What a weapon to have in your arsenal of amps. I also have an inexpensive two twelve one hundred and twenty watt ss amp that will P*** off the same drummer. As in, "I can't hear myself". Tools you can bring into play when necessary. Usually the guys a jam with play way too loud to begin with. You can't hear each other. This is why I'm liking little amps now. They are more practical and useful for home use. They curb your tendency to crank it up but even my five watt amps get really loud.
That Blackheart at three watts might be tamed down a little I'm hoping.
Duffy
Winfield, Pa.
It is light and puts out some quality sound. The clean channel is awesome with my Epi LPs with SD JB bridge pickups and Jazz neck on one and the best is the JB and
'59 on the other one.
I have two guitars with flat wound strings and Hot Rodded SDs on them that really sound good with this amp. The flat wound strings give that extra smooth tonality to what you play.
I have a lot to learn with this amp. It looks simple but it has depth to it that defies the generic descriptions and the apparent simplicity. There are tones to be had by tweaking the controls that are not like presets or anything. I have to work with the amp and explore to uncover superior tones lurking undiscovered.
It is a high quality build and looks vintage with the silver grill cloth and it could be easily overlooked as a FM series by someone leisurely passing. Or someone might wonder what that FM "x" sounds so good.
I now want to get an 8 ohm 4 by 12 cab. I can only imagine what it would sound like. My cabs are 16 ohms and the fender technicians told me to match it with an 8 ohm cabinet, don't mess around with a mismatch.
I also have a Tweed HRDx with Jensen P12N that rocks the neighborhood, not to mention the house. That'll get over a incessantly overloud drummer with no problem. What a weapon to have in your arsenal of amps. I also have an inexpensive two twelve one hundred and twenty watt ss amp that will P*** off the same drummer. As in, "I can't hear myself". Tools you can bring into play when necessary. Usually the guys a jam with play way too loud to begin with. You can't hear each other. This is why I'm liking little amps now. They are more practical and useful for home use. They curb your tendency to crank it up but even my five watt amps get really loud.
That Blackheart at three watts might be tamed down a little I'm hoping.
Duffy
Winfield, Pa.