Cranial Discharge

The gooey ooze that leaks out of my head

Peavey Triumph PAG 60 1×12

Another “didn’t expect to use it as much as I did” story. I bought this in a down-sizing spree when I sold the 100 watt Carvin and looked for something smaller. I was hesitant to buy Peavey, even though I hadn’t had a bad experience with them. I can’t say how many dozens of amps I tried. The nice thing was that I wasn’t in a hurry. I took months. I first heard about this model from a local gigging musician who said he liked it in contrast to his Marshall and that he liked the high gain sound. I was hoping for the usual – a one-size-fits-all-swiss-army-knife type of do it all amp. Funny how that approach almost never works. Still, it’s what I wanted. I wasn’t planning on using it to play out, I just wanted something with a pretty good clean and a nice drive that I could record at home with.

The PAG 60 is a three channel amp with 2 6L6 tubes and a number of 12AX7s in the preamp. The reverb sounds good for my purposes – which is to say I keep it on all the time, but quite low. No Dick Dale sounds here. While it is set up as a three channel amp (normal, crunch, and lead), the crunch and lead channels share EQ, which can be problematic at times.

I’ve heard complaints about the sound quality of the Triumph series of amps, but for me this one worked out well. Maybe I was lucky with the tubes? When I got it serviced at one point, the tech said the two power tubes were probably about half the value of the amp! Either way, the amp was flexible and very usable. This amp and the Carvin guitar can do Santana all day long, as well as get close to bunches of other sounds. I liked the Carvin best with this amp. My Strat didn’tdrive this amp as hard as it likes to be driven. My Les Paul sounded good with it too. The PAG 60 is very much in the Mesa-Boogie Mark vein.

The biggest down side of the amp is that it can be awfully hard balancing the volume levels of the three channels when playing out. The normal channel has a gain control which increases volume, but also increase “dirt” somewhat, although it never gets’ really dirty. It works quite well I think. Both crunch and lead channels have a “pre” and “post” control. In both channels setting the “pre” high and the “post” lower results in increased noise and distortion. I assume this is all 12AX7 preamp distortion, and it can get quite irritating at certain levels. The amp has one master volume and that’s where the trouble lies. In theory you should be able to set your three channels the way you like and then use the master to set the overall volume – perfect to go from bedroom, to practice, to gig, right? Nope. Adjusting the master completely changes everything else. All the other levels need to be reset when the master is changed. I assume this has to do with the interaction of the preamp and poweramp sections, and how the tubes react at different volumes.

Still, with a little effort the sound can be quite good I think. While it is a fairly loud amp, it’s actual volume seems to stop increasing with the master at about 12 o’clock (half way). After that the sound becomes more saturated, which can sound really good on the clean channel, but can get quite hissy and noisy, especially on the lead channel.

Overall, this amp is a solid choice for a gigging cover band or other situation where you need multiple sounds in a compact (but heavy!) package. For my purposes it proved very reliable, and the great thing is that they go for absolute bargain prices. They have none of the pseudo-vintage cache of the Peavey Classic 30 or 50 (which are both also great bang-for-the-buck amps), and they were never used by anyone famous as far as I know.

Peavey stopped making these a while back, and they came out with the Peavey “Ultra” series, which seemed to be nearly identical in operation to the Triumph PAG 60. The sound of the newer amps was definitely darker – perhaps bowing to the folks that want more of a “rectifier” sound, or maybe just newer amps with different tubes? The “Ultra” series was dropped fairly quickly, so I guess they never sold that well.

I sold the Peavey and replaced it with a used Fender Hot Rod Deluxe, which I only used for a short time, replacing that with a Mesa Blue Angel.

 

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Posted in Amps by gm on April 10th, 2011 at 4:30 am.

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