I think he's just too excited haha.
I put some Heritage H30 55Hz in one of my Bogner cabs and he liked 'em so much he found this mint cab with the same.
You won't be able to go back to a stock 1959 circuit with this kind of mod unless you literally put everything on switches. It can be done, but it will be a ton of work. The difference between a stock 1959 and the most basic version of the amp in that last video is at least 20 components as...
I wouldn't immediately think of AIC when talking about the Lundgren M series because it was designed for Frederick Thorendal. When I think of AIC, I think of chewy '90s rock, not stop-on-a-dime down-tuned Swedish metal. But I suppose it depends on a lot of other things in the signal chain.
That should be pretty easy. The Meshuggah is just an 800 circuit with diode clipping. Typical Jose mod type of thing. Ceriatone has a layout you can use on their website.
Start by reading everything on Rob Robinette's website.
https://robrobinette.com/Amp_Stuff.htm
Then buy The Ultimate Tone series from London Power.
https://londonpower.com/tut-selection/
There are a bunch of other resources as well. But the sky's the limit when it comes to modding a 1959.
It's a subtle difference, but in that clip the Tremoverb sounds best to me. Slightly thicker low mids, less highs. But could just be the normal variance in the components and pots due to tolerance. Certainly not different enough to warrant going out of the way to find one.
I dunno man... I've been listening to Rectifier clips all day and in every blind shootout between all the variations, I consistently pick the Rev G as the one I prefer. And I believe that's what the Tremoverb is? But I will say that the differences are still quite subtle, at least in all the...
What about a decent Tremoverb instead? Does the Rev F really sound that different? I can't imagine playing $5K+ for a 30-year-old Rectifier when a Tremoverb or Rectoverb goes for $800 - $1500.