
Paul Clifton
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Everything posted by Paul Clifton
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**SOLD** Fender American Deluxe Precision - 2015
Paul Clifton replied to snookd's topic in Basses For Sale
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I bought a beautiful blue CIJ Jazz from Paul and communications and pickup were smooth and easy - many thanks!
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Review - Fender Rumble 100 1x12 vs Gallien Krueger MB110 1x10
Paul Clifton replied to Paul Clifton's topic in Amps and Cabs
Cheers! I couldn't find a comparison review before I bought so I thought it might be useful for other people in a similar position. -
Just a quick note of my thoughts when A/B-ing these two practice/small gig amps at home recently. Comparison of features Both are similar in price and weight (Rumble £240, GK £260; GK 21lbs, Rumble 22lbs); both have a single ceramic speaker and no tweeter. Both feature 4-band EQ and preset contour button. Rumble also has vintage and bright switches. The Rumble is bigger (bigger 12 inch speaker) and has a lovely design that appealed to me as it matched my Princeton guitar amp with its silver cloth front. The GK is more compact with a more modern, utilitarian look. Knob-quality is higher on the GK, general build quality is good on both. Both have 1/8th inch aux-in, headphone out (1/4" on GK, 1/8th on Rumble) and DI out. However, the GK DI is balanced neutral pre-and post selectable, but the Fender is cabinet-emulated and post-EQ, so you can't get a 'pure' clean signal to a PA board or studio. Sound The most important factor! The Rumble has a more mid-focused tone, with lots of grunt and punch, and can go surprisingly loud for such a little unit. It is quite boomy and bassy, but the major shortfall for me (as a sad 80s slaphappy player) is that it cannot deliver glassy highs, and is quite harsh on the top end. The choice of 13khz as the treble and bright switch frequency may be a little too high for a full range speaker with no tweeter (the GK uses 4khz). Overall the sound was a little flat and lifeless, though for finger style rock and roll it was nice and punchy and trouser-flapping. The GK was surprisingly clear and rounded in comparison. I found I used the pre-cut contour switch all the time to get rid of the 'boxiness' from the small closed-cab's flat EQ settings. With treble and bass at 2 o'clock and low mids and high mids flat, the sound was very rounded and clean - punchy low end and crystalline highs (surprisingly good considering no tweeter). Overall, I way preferred the tone (for my style of play) to the Rumble, and it was also noticably louder - surprising considering the smaller 10" speaker, which I expected to fart out as I pushed up the volume. The only disappointment in the amp was the huge difference in sound when switching to headphones - a massive change of EQ was required (contour off, treble reduced to almost zero) to achieve a similar tone. I suspect this would also be the case for DI ing it. Overall The GK has a much smaller footprint but is louder and with a clearer, punchier tone. For twenty quid more than the Rumble (best internet prices) it was the clear winner for me, which is a shame as I loved the Rumble's styling and had high hopes for it. The lack of a decent clean DI out on the Rumble was the final nail in its coffin - it was returned and the GK MB 110 was kept.
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Strat owners of the world! Pickup options... how many do you use?
Paul Clifton replied to Ajoten's topic in Guitars
I tend to use bridge and middle together, but sometimes bridge and neck with most of the blend towards bridge. With overdrive I like neck. -
Great, easy part-ex deal with Ash that went through smoothly with tip-top communication every step of the way.
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Feeler 1967 Ampeg B15n Black - Withdrawn
Paul Clifton replied to pmjos's topic in Amps and Cabs For Sale
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Genz Benz Shuttle 3.0 10T combo *SOLD*
Paul Clifton replied to ordep's topic in Amps and Cabs For Sale
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Sold Mark an Enfield bass - excellent communication and fast payment. Recommended and trustworthy.