Winfield Thomas Cyclone
Transcription
Winfield Thomas Cyclone
amps You might also be interested to know that the quote we referenced from Jeff Bakos was offered during a telephone call before we had even mentioned acquiring the Princeton. We frequently compare notes on what’s ‘hot’ in the vintage amp world, and the 12 watt Princeton Reverb’s elevated stature and value in 2012 can be attributed to the same qualities described by Dave Boze in our very first November 1999 issue of TQR. If you play a single coil electric in the style of a Stratocaster, Telecaster or Jazzmaster, nothing quite delivers the lush and liquid clean tones of a Princeton Reverb. And of course, there is the reverb… Granted, the tremolo in the Princeton has always been a little weak, but that’s the only weakness to be found in this amp. Turned up from 6-10 the Princeton gradually spills over into increasingly thick and musical distortion that doesn’t discriminate between humbuckers and single coils like some other amps. All of our guitars sound extraordinary through this little amp, not so little now with the addition of the Red Fang 12. The voice of a great blackface Princeton Reverb simply delivers an entirely unique and different soundstage from all the other blackface models. Perhaps that’s why we spied a blackface Princeton miked behind Mike Campbell’s Vox Super Beatle stacks when we saw him with his L.A. band in Anaheim a few years ago. The Princeton’s clean tones certainly seem deeper and wider, and overdriven, the Princeton possesses a smooth and penetrating tone richly gilded with harmonic overtones and extreme clarity. Clarity and distortion? Well, yeah, that’s really what you want from a Fender amp. A Supro or a Gibson cranked is going to deliver a murkier, muddier, funkier quality of distortion, and that sound definitely has its place, too. But the Princeton Reverb stands alone in it’s ability to provide crystalline clarity and depth played clean, and equally captivating overdriven tones that can be heard on Jeff Beck’s early ‘Orange Album’ Memphis tracks produced by Steve Cropper. Listen, vintage amp prices are down a little right now, but demand for the smaller classics like the blackface Princeton and Deluxe Reverb remains high for obvious reasons. There are only so many blackface amps to go around, and the reissues don’t sound like the originals. Indeed, the demise of the Accutronics company in Elgin, Illinois has virtually guaranteed the end of Fender reverb as we once knew it (unless you replace your new tank with a vintage correct reverb pan from CE Distribution and Amplified Parts.com). As we stared at our computer monitor on December 16 pondering whether or not to buy the ‘64 Princeton, we considered one question: What other amp could we possibly buy for $1500 today that can equal the sound of Princeton Reverb at that oh-so friendly volume level, while earning a permanent place in our music room as an ultimate keeper for recording, home use, and small clubs? Here’s the deal… With vintage amps, original speakers are irrelevant. Most of them blew a long time ago, and if they haven’t, they surely will, and you have a much better selection at hand today than at any time in the ‘60s. We have also come to a point in time where vintage-correct transformers are being built with far more consistency and precision today by companies like Magnetic Components, Mercury Magnetics, Heyboer, and Mojotone. Don’t be turned off by the prospect of replacing a replaced transformer to get a great deal on a classic amp. As far as capacitors and resistors are concerned, we prefer to find amps with intact original circuit boards so that we can make our own decisions on what should be replaced. And remember this – there is a difference between what might need to be replaced for an amp to be made truly roadworthy for heavy gigging, compared to an amp you will only play at home. What we don’t want is a vintage amp with all the original caps replaced (and especially with orange drops). Yes, we’ve said that before. Hey, we love a lot of contemporary custom amps built by very talented custom builders, in fact, you’ll be meeting one in a minute, but if the sound of a vintage blackface Fender really lights your fire, and 12 watts fits squarely in your wheelhouse, you can do this, and if you want a 12 inch speaker like ours, you can buy a replacement baffleboard cut for a 12 with grillcloth attached from Mojotone and simply park the original baffleboard safely in a closet. Time has come today for your very own vintage Princeton Reverb. Quest forth… TQ Winfield Thomas Cyclone Once again, a reader directed our attention to another small custom amp builder in a very unlikely part of the world. Talking to amp builders about their craft is always interesting… Speaking with ‘Winnie’ Thomas, a native of Staten Island, was a revelation on many different levels. We love New York, always have, and not just for our favorite haunts -continued- TONEQUEST REPORT V.13 N.06 April 2012 15 amps and the energy of the streets, or the fact that Mrs. Wilson (Liz) was living in the West Village at 4th & Broadway when we first met. Plenty of memories were made there, but it is the people of New York that really make the place what it is – the greatest city on Earth. Talking to Winnie was a real kick for us because he has one of those voices that just naturally imparts humor and irony to simple declarative statements with no effort. His is a smoothly tempered voice entirely suitable for radio or a stand up act, and it made a fascinating story all the more interesting. Should you call him to discuss an amp, you’ll understand, and we hope you do. Enjoy… TQR: a band at the small Vermont state college I was attending needed a guitar player. So I became the rhythm guitar player and we made a record in 1965 that went absolutely nowhere. Forty years later it began to appear on compilations of unknown ‘60s music and we were interviewed by an online magazine called Ugly Things in 2006. If you google the band Mott’s Men you’ll find it. We were playing down in Philadelphia at some hops put on by a DJ there, but the band broke up because the other guitar player couldn’t leave his girlfriend, which was just as well, because with my history I probably would have died if we had ‘made it.’ We have to ask… Where is Cochise, Arizona? TQR: It’s a ghost town, actually. It’s about 80 miles east of Tucson, and the entire county is known as Cochise. It extends from north of I-10 to the Mexican border, and from the border of New Mexico halfway between here and Tucson. The village of Cochise consists of a school, a post office, about seven houses and two abandoned historic buildings. It’s unincorporated. Greensboro, Vermont wasn’t much different, which is where I was living when I started this business, but I was born in Staten Island, New York. TQR: Do you have a musical background or is it more technical? I played the devil’s instrument for four years – the accordion. My father was a Lawrence Welk fan… I also played soprano bugle in the police athletic league marching band on Staten Island. I bought my first guitar in 1957, but I really didn’t learn to play it until around 1963, and by then I considered myself to be a folk singer. I would walk over to The Village and play for loose change and come back and give the change to the bums in the Bowery. I went back to college after flunking out the first time, still a folkie, and How did all of this lead to you eventually building guitar amplifiers? When I got out of college I continued to play both country and rock & roll in New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania and I started building speaker cabinets for a guy in Ledgewood, New Jersey named Tommy Barth, who owned a music store there. He would give me the speakers and hardware and I learned how to apply tolex and I would build cabinets for him. In 1979 I relocated back to Vermont playing in country bands, and I eventually just got sick of playing for a while. TQR: Where can you make a living playing country music in Vermont? Oh, my goodness. There was a whole circuit of what they call the “animal clubs” there – the Elks Lodge, the Moose Lodge, the Lions Club… I was just tired of looking at drunks so I quit for awhile and the only thing I kept was my flattop. I got remarried, and one day I decided I wanted to play again and I bought an Ibanez Artist guitar – the same basic guitar that John Scofield played, John Scofield and then I couldn’t find an amp I liked. I had screwed around with electronics a little and I could read a schematic, so I decided I was going to build my own amp. You may have heard of the AX84 Forum – it was featured in Guitar Player several years ago and it’s populated by a group of builders. Randall Aiken had built his version of an 18 watt Plexi Marshall, I corresponded with him and suggested we put -continued- 16 TONEQUEST REPORT V.13 N.05 March 2012 amps four output tubes in it. We did that, and then I started building the amp. You know how it is – you get better the more you do something, and I had a few false starts, but I eventually got it together and the amp was a Plexi Marshall circuit but with four 6V6s. I initially called it the November Project on the AX84 Forum, but because of a copyright on the name I just called it the Winfield. Today it is different from the original amp, but if you look at the schematic, it looks a lot like Plexi Marshall, which is not too different from a tweed narrow panel Bassman. I build a 5 watt, and 18 watt and a 30 watt version. The 5W has a single-ended octal tube – you can use a 6V6 or a 6L6, the 18W has two EL-84s with a master volume, and the big one is four EL-84s with a half power switch. the Cyclone, I used to build Matchless Spitfire clones using the old Hammond reverb amps like Dr. Z did, until they began to get too scarce and expensive. Looking at the schematic, the Spitfire was very similar to a Vox AC-15. The only difference was that he used a doubled-up 12AX7 instead of an EF86, and he added a tone control. For the Cyclone, I went back to the original AC-15 that had a normal and a vibrato channel. I focused on the normal channel that originally had a volume control, a brilliant switch and a cut control, and I put in a tone control and master volume with an EF86. I also use a power transformer with more current available than an original AC15, and a larger output transformer. My amps have started out being copies of original designs and they have evolved. TQR: TQR: As opposed to a pentode/triode switch… Right. I don’t like the sound of a triode. You need the whole pentode. Triodes sound fine for hi-fi, but not for guitar. The original 5 watt amp used one EL-84, a 12AX7 and a 6CA4 rectifier tube. About ten years ago I sold my first amp, and I’ve been averaging about twenty amps a year. I built a model I call the Elizabeth that is my take on a blackface Fender named after a dog that would howl every time I picked up a guitar. The dog I have now, Amy, sleeps through band practice in the middle of the floor of the practice room. The Brat is another model named after my daughter. It has a full tone stack with a cathode follower like a tweed Bassman, but with a power amp that’s configured like a tweed Deluxe with EL-84s. I’m building a version now with a rectifier switch so you can choose between a solid state or tube rectifier. TQR: So the chronology began with the 5 watt Winfield, the Elizabeth and the Brat. On your web site you note using a ceramic magnet Weber California with an aluminum dustcap. Yes, in the style of a JBL, and I use the Eminence Legend speakers. There are two 10s in the amp we sent you for review. The response in that amp with those speakers is just phenomenal. I use two 16 ohm speakers in parallel for an 8 ohm load, and since I use what is basically a large 40 watt Pro Reverb output transformer, it makes a big difference in the way the amp sounds. Before I started to make And has that been a result of your own evolving approach, feedback from customers, or both? A little bit of both, but I learned that the larger Weber output transformer I use really makes a big difference in the way the amp sounds. I tried a Heyboer and I even tried a transformer with multiple taps and they didn’t sound the same. I build more amps now with 10s, too. TQR: What have you learned about component selection? I use carbon film resistors and generic yellow tubular caps, and they all work and sound fine. Do you know about Apex Junior? Steve Slater has a warehouse business and he has been supplying me with parts for years. He buys stuff in very large quantities and sells them at very reasonable prices. For example, his 47mf 450 volt caps are usually $2-$4 each elsewhere, and he sells them at $1.25. A lot of big companies buy from him too, just because he beats wholesale. I buy Alpha pots made in Taiwan and they work just fine. CTS pots are very nice, but they are also twice the price. We had to increase the price of the Cyclone slightly because it is being sold exclusively through Rainbow Music, but as a result of that I am selling more amps, and Harvey at Rainbow is also buying speaker cabinets from me. The head cabinets are still made by my cabinet maker in Vermont, and his work is just flawless. The speaker cabinets are made here in Wilcox, Arizona and I cover them myself. -continued- TONEQUEST REPORT V.13 N.06 April 2012 17 review TQR: v Are are they all made from pine? Yes, and they are very resonant. We use birch ply for the baffleboard but the cabinets are all pine and I think it makes a difference. TQR: What’s your take on tubes? I use JJs, and for EF86s I have been buying Russian surplus Svetlanas. I bought a batch of 50 and some of them are noisy, but you know what? They sing like no other tube. I think they were originally designed as a microphone tube. I have a Westinghouse EF86 in my personal Cyclone, but the Svetlana sounds the best in my opinion. The bottom line is how does the amp sound when it’s all put together? TQR: Do you find that two ‘identical’ amps that you have built sound different? All the time. The parts have a variance in the actual values and when you put them all together, of course there is some variance. Harvey at Rainbow Music will hear one that he will comment on as being especially good. Every amp is a little different, just like every guitar. Did you use the power cord that came with the Cyclone we sent? It’s a cheap Chinese $1.75 power cord and Harvey pointed out that the amp sounded bigger with that cheap cord, and it does. Don’t ask me how or why, but try the amp with one of your other power cords and then try the cheap one we sent. Everything makes a difference. TQR: It sounds as if you have landed in a great place to operate a small amp shop. I’m really happy to be here. The band I’m in is the best I’ve been in for years, and we have four good voices out of five guys, which is unusual. We play a couple of roadhouses, and we play down in Bisbee, which is a funky old town on the Mexican border. We’re having fun.TQ www.winfieldamps.com, 520-384-6017 www.60sgaragebands.com/bandbios/mottsmen.html 18 REVIEW The Desert Cyclone Have you ever looked under the hood of an original Mark Sampson era Matchless DC-30? If so, you know it to be one of the most obsessively overbuilt amplifiers ever put into production. We can’t imagine how many man-hours were required to solder and bolt a vintage DC-30 up, but they survive today as a tribute to one man’s obsession with tone at any cost. It was a heady ride while it lasted. Intended to honor the original Vox AC30 with none of the inherent challenges, the DC-30 definitely earned a place in the vintage hall of fame. The sound and voice of the 15 watt Winfield Cyclone offers a bit of that special Matchless DNA, but our first impressions also revealed a sound that is far less constrained by comparison. We always thought that our DC-30 and the two vintage candy panel AC30s we have owned sounded as good as advertised, but their complex circuits also lent a certain stodgy stiffness that could be difficult to unleash, and downright impossible with humbucking pickups. More comparisons… While the Cyclone seems to have been more directly inspired by the AC15 and the Matchless Spitfire, most of us have probably never heard a real Vox AC15 in good working order, or a Spitfire for that matter – but you would be correct in assuming that they sound very much like half of an AC30. If we were to compare the Cyclone to a modern Vox AC15, which is, by the way, a very good amp previously reviewed here, the Winfield can best be described as producing a somewhat looser, airier and more forgiving tone that is less dry and strident than the Vox. The harmonics lurking within our guitars are more vivid in the Cyclone, and the overall fidelity seems richer, deeper, more detailed and interesting. This isn’t a complicated amp, and perhaps that fact also contributes to its pure tone. No reverb, TONEQUEST REPORT V.13 N.06 April 2012 review no trem, just a classic Cut control to manage treble and presence, Master Volume, Tone, and Volume. Fundamental to the sound of the Cyclone is also the 2x10 open back pine cabinet loaded with two Eminence Legend 10s. As we played through the Cyclone with all of our guitars we were reminded that nothing sounds quite like an open back 2x10 cabinet, and having heard this one, we realized that we needed one, with these 16 ohm speakers. Even if you don’t really need another amplifier, you might want to consider buying the cabinet. Could be a real life changing experience for both home use and gigging. That’s a hint. Aside from the typical percussive quality of dual 10s, we marveled at the extraordinary bass response. The 15 watt Cyclone easily sounds more like 25 watts through the Eminence speakers, but again, 10s have a way of delivering the goods with no pain. This amp can get loud enough to fill a room, but it does so with a kinder, gentler attitude and a total weight for the head and cab of just 15 and 25 pounds respectively. Your 50 watt head collecting dust over yonder would become ‘eminently’ usable with Winfield’s little cabinet. Another hint. Back to that low end… Playing full chords through the Cyclone, all the chime and detail you could want is present and vividly accounted for, but the big surprise comes when you venture down low on the A and E strings. A lot of smaller amps just can’t reproduce lows very well, and the output transformer is often to blame. Now take a look at the huge 40 watt Weber Pro Reverb output transformer perched on the chassis of the Cyclone. That’s money, and yes, your jaw is likely to drop when you experience the lush fidelity of the Cyclone and that big, tight bottom. This is a rare and significant phenomenon in our opinion, and one to be fully exploited and savored. If your wallet hasn’t begun to creep out of the back pocket of your jeans yet, you aren’t paying sufficient attention. Hey, you’re not reading another cookie-cutter review in Guitar Maniac: The Purist’s Guide to Fine Axes, Beautiful Asses and the Ruthless Pursuit of Fabulous Living…Come on now! When we first received the Cyclone the Svetlana EF86 exhibited a faint metallic rattle typical of modern EF86s, but the more we played through the amp, the rattle diminished. Have no fear – any such microphonics are entirely justified by what you will hear pouring out of those speakers. Now, you can push the Cyclone into distortion, but this is not a high gain amp endowed with intense, grinding overdriven tones in the style of an ‘80s Marshall head. Extreme volume settings will produce perfectly crunchy, chimey rhythm tones, or a moderately busted up sound for solos. Since the Cyclone occupies a cleaner space, any distortion or overdrive pedals you wish to use will sound all that much better through this amp. We used a Bob Burt clean boost, Wampler Plexi-Drive, EWS Fuzzy Drive and an RC Booster all with great effect and exceptional tonal purity. Clean signals always sound better going into a boost or distortion effect in our opinion. ‘Dirty’ pickups and cranked up amps just don’t mix well with your best distortion devices. Clean up yer tone, then step on yer pedal. Having spoken with Winnie Thomas, it seems that his intention in building the Cyclone was simply to design and build an amplifier that sounded really good, and equally unique when compared to many other booteek amps. On the other hand, he doesn’t seem the type to spend much time thinking about what other people are doing. Building a lone wolf sounds simple enough, but perhaps not considering that every guitar amplifier of note has been knocked off by now, or at least marketed as such. What we find so intriguing and appealing about the Cyclone is that it does indeed possess a truly unique sound, yet familiar enough to awaken memories of classic guitar tones that sound better than ever experienced through the prism of Thomas’ vision. Living in a place where our galaxy is so vividly revealed in the night sky and moonshine casts long shadows beneath the majestic saguaro, we can only guess that Winfield Thomas has landed in a place where peace and clarity were not so hard to find. His work reveals it. “Built by a man at peace.” We’ll buy that.TQ TONEQUEST REPORT V.13 N.06 April 2012 19