I've heard about these for a while. Which companies make them?
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Cheap JCM800 copys
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If you include "made" them, the Peavey VTM Series amps were a pretty good JCM800 clone that is MUCH cheaper than the real thing, built like a tank, and cheap to buy on Ebay. Bugera is making a couple of Marshall clones now that are really cheap new, and cosmetically look a lot like JMP Marshalls. But the VTMs built in the 80s are still going strong, who knows how long the Bugeras will last? Word is that they have increased their build quality but only time will tell. VoiceX3 is a JCF member who swears by his Bugera and has been gigging with it for awhile now.Ron is the MAN!!!!
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I have one of the Bugera 1990s and love it. I hard wired the tranny to the board, solving the weak link, and it has been performing flawless ever since. Also, as you can tell by my avatar, I'm a Laney player, too. My 50 watt AOR is basically a hotrodded Marshall clone, as well. My guitarist runs a Sovtek Mig, which, again, is a Marshall clone. The list goes on and on. Never had a chance to try a VTM though, but I'd love to. Heard good things about them.I'm not Ron!
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I second Laney AOR. I have a pair of AORs (one head and a 1x12 combo). I also have a DSL100. When I want AC/DC tones, I usually go for a Laney rather than the DSL100's, green channel. The thing they cut out of modern Marshalls is the choke. Part of the equation the old amps had.
Also, the guts in a Laney AOR are very similar to the JCM800's of those days. And both were made in the UK.
As far as cheap, AOR's (unfortunantely for me) rarely make it past 4 bills. My 1x12 I got for $230, the head I bought in Hollywood on Sunset for $500 back in the late 80s.
To me, they aren't worth selling for $400. I doubt I'd part with mine unless the price was doubled, just because I think they are a great amp head and not worth selling for less than that.
So go get one!Last edited by DonP; 09-05-2010, 09:59 AM.
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How about the Peavey Windsor?
Marshall DSL on green channel with crunch mode on does a good job too. I did a side by side comparison with a friend's 800.
I would even say the Peavey 5150/6505 on the crunch channel. Not exactly a JCM800 but in a similar territory.
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You can find JCM800s and other Marshalls going for reasonable prices if you look around. I've seen some of the less common, 800-era four-holers going for well under $1k, as well as the channel switching reverb models...which are my favorite. The single-channel MV ones seem to go for more from what I've seen.
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Originally posted by Rich#6 View Postnot next to the bugera's $450.
Save up and give in. You can buy fringe equipment all your life but at the end of the day you will never be completely satisfied.I like EL34s.
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