Kerry Brown
Ambassador of the Great Northern Bar Jams
There were several amplifier manufacturers in Canada in the 1960's and 70's. Here is a comparison of a few of them. The Garnet is the best to my ears.
I’ve owned several Traynor amps. I currently have a YCV20WR which I believe is one of their best. I’ve played almost their complete range at one time or another. I can confirm they are built extremely well. The mass produced amps I think compare in build quality would be Mesa.Traynor amps are built like brickhouses, pretty well bulletproof. Another thing about at least some Traynor designs, they actually run the pentode type output tubes (EL34's) as pentodes.
This is not common in guitar amps, where most types that we commonly know of run the output pentodes as "tetrodes".
If you look at the schematic diagram for most pentodes equipped guitar amps, you'll see that the (grid 3) suppressor grid is tied to the cathode (tetrode connected), essentially wasting this feature of the pentode valve.
I'm not sure if "all" Traynor's do this, but at least some of the Traynor designs apply a negative voltage (derived from the negative bias supply) to the suppressor grid, which is how pentodes are meant to be used.
Applying a negative voltage to the suppressor grid greatly reduces "secondary emission" & thus runs the tubes more efficiently.
Any amp that is using "fixed biased tetrode connected pentodes" can have this done as a very simple modification, though it will make the power amp respond a little differently. Cheers
I bet my 12 gauge could alter that opinionpretty well bulletproof.
I think IMHO that Traynor is designed and built quite a bit better than Mesa Boogie.I’ve owned several Traynor amps. I currently have a YCV20WR which I believe is one of their best. I’ve played almost their complete range at one time or another. I can confirm they are built extremely well. The mass produced amps I think compare in build quality would be Mesa.
The only Mesa I’ve owned was a Transatlantic TA-30. It was built like a tank. I can’t speak to the electronics other than to say two years of packing it around it never hiccuped once. It stood up way better than various Fender and other amps I’ve owned.I think IMHO that Traynor is designed and built quite a bit better than Mesa Boogie.
I think Mesa Boogie is an overall poorly designed amp. It is not made to last, has greatly increased cost of maintenance, and is difficult and unnecessarily time consuming to maintain.
Based on years of maintaining Mesa Boogies, I would prefer a Traynor any day. I would not buy or recommend a Mesa Boogie.
The reputation of Boogie is primarily advertising hype....not reality.
I worked on a Mesa Triple Crown yesterday...brand new, and already failing. No Thanks.
I dig that guitar actually! Amp is great too