EVH 5150iii 50w 6L6 Stealth Review

LiveeviL2000

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As some of you know I picked up one of these amps used from a friend of mine for about half the price of a new one. He also threw in a 212 Carvin Slant cab.

Now that I’ve had it for a few days and played around with some of the settings and all 3 channels, here is my review.

1) aesthetics- it looks completely mean. All black with the signature EVH grill and hints of silver. Chicken head knobs look great with clear white markings. And it feels solid.

2) controls- the controls are clearly marked easy to read even in dim light. Every little movement of the controls makes a difference.
Channel 1 and 2 have separate controls for gain and volume (inner and out knob configuration) while they share the 3 EQ controls. Channel 3 has completely independent controls from the other two. There is a ton of range on each knob. I do knock a couple of points off for the resonance control being on the back. But it’s not a deal breaker for me. Just would have been nice to have on the front next to the presence control.

3) sound / tone - the green channel can go from beautiful cleans to crunch when you pump up the gain. The blue channel picks up where the green leaves off and it doesn’t take much of a twist of the gain knob to get it to sound pretty mean. The red channel can get you into some trouble with the neighbors as it can make you axe sound like a tree cutting chainsaw. For my personal taste less gain is more here (I can’t believe I just said that!). The tones I have been getting on each channel are pretty nice and varied. As of now, my favorite channel is the blue channel with the mids scooped and gain at about 10 o’clock. It sounds down right magical through the 212.

The only pedals I have running though it are my 10band EQ and reverb. Both through the loop. Otherwise I am plugging directly to the front.

I did plug my DSL40CR into the 212 to do a comparison and I like both equally. It just seems the 5150 can push more gain easier than my DSL. Of course there is that distinct Marshall sound compared to the EVH.
 
A simple and honest review well done. Congrats on your new generator of sonic mayhem... :cheers:

Your amp's resonance control location:
As I looked at a couple of pics of this amp, there's obviously no real estate left on the amp's front panel for this control. But at least its rear location is right next to the impedance selector and speaker jacks, which it's where it should be for a proper layout regarding good amp design.
 
A simple and honest review well done. Congrats on your new generator of sonic mayhem... :cheers:

Your amp's resonance control location:
As I looked at a couple of pics of this amp, there's obviously no real estate left on the amp's front panel for this control. But at least its rear location is right next to the impedance selector and speaker jacks, which it's where it should be for a proper layout regarding good amp design.
Yeah. I get it. But maybe they could have done something similar to what they did with the volume and gain knobs on channel 1 and 2.
As I said. Not a deal breaker. I usually don’t mess with those two controls much after I set them anyway
 
Very cool that it's working out for you! I like the fact you prefer the Blue/Middle section over the red/ultra kill section. Most folks that get a 5150 tend to just go over the top right off the bat and stick into that territory, but like you said: in this amp, less IS actually more. I guess it goes back to both Eddie himself who didn't really rely on as much gain as one would believe, but rather sculpted the heaviness of the sound thru tone. But also the initial Peavey 5150s with only a Bright and Crunch channel, which the Blue section here is modeled towards.

It was the direct sibling of the 5150, the Peavey Ultra ( a VERY similar designed amp), that made players and even Eddie himself demand updates in the following amps to introduce the 3rd Channel for higher gain. In that respect, they MORE than delivered on the goal and became a staple of modern high gain amps to this day with all the incarnations of the EVH 5150 series
 
As some of you know I picked up one of these amps used from a friend of mine for about half the price of a new one. He also threw in a 212 Carvin Slant cab.

Now that I’ve had it for a few days and played around with some of the settings and all 3 channels, here is my review.

1) aesthetics- it looks completely mean. All black with the signature EVH grill and hints of silver. Chicken head knobs look great with clear white markings. And it feels solid.

2) controls- the controls are clearly marked easy to read even in dim light. Every little movement of the controls makes a difference.
Channel 1 and 2 have separate controls for gain and volume (inner and out knob configuration) while they share the 3 EQ controls. Channel 3 has completely independent controls from the other two. There is a ton of range on each knob. I do knock a couple of points off for the resonance control being on the back. But it’s not a deal breaker for me. Just would have been nice to have on the front next to the presence control.

3) sound / tone - the green channel can go from beautiful cleans to crunch when you pump up the gain. The blue channel picks up where the green leaves off and it doesn’t take much of a twist of the gain knob to get it to sound pretty mean. The red channel can get you into some trouble with the neighbors as it can make you axe sound like a tree cutting chainsaw. For my personal taste less gain is more here (I can’t believe I just said that!). The tones I have been getting on each channel are pretty nice and varied. As of now, my favorite channel is the blue channel with the mids scooped and gain at about 10 o’clock. It sounds down right magical through the 212.

The only pedals I have running though it are my 10band EQ and reverb. Both through the loop. Otherwise I am plugging directly to the front.

I did plug my DSL40CR into the 212 to do a comparison and I like both equally. It just seems the 5150 can push more gain easier than my DSL. Of course there is that distinct Marshall sound compared to the EVH.
Yup, I thought it was a very good sounding amp too. A bit more complicated inside than most designs but has nice crunch..
 
You would probably like it.
It goes from Fender clean, to chunk, to ridiculous overdrive. The OD is smooth and creamy not f. arty.
And it has Fender service support which is worth something.
I had one years ago. Seemed overly compressed, I did expect some with high gain but it lost some pick attack even with lower gain. I even changed out one rube to a 12AY7.
I shoulds kept it tho..... worked around it
 
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