This is from the old Lynch website from years ago. This is his studio rig for that cd:
"Sometimes you try things and it doesn't work. So you fall back and do things that you're more familiar with, which is just going straight-ahead balls-out," George said of the recording for the second Lynch Mob album. Simply titled, "Lynch Mob," George returned to a more simplistic approach to recording his guitar sound in 1992.
"I bought two 50-watt Marshall plexi's in Japan six months earlier. When they got delivered, they sounded great. That's what on the record. I didn't use anything but the plexi Marshalls and a Soldano, which are the obvious things to use."
Using the Marshall and Soldano setups in conjunction with each other in an A/B situation, "...the Marshall gave it that warm fluid tone and the Soldano had a little bit more of the bite and crunch. Together they sound real nice," George described. In the front end, he brought in his Ibanez Tube Scremaer TS-808 to goose the amp's input a little.
Other pedals present came out of what was known as "George's Toy Box." An assortment of pedals made their way onto the floor like the Sustainiac, a Boss GE-7 e.q. and a Vox chrometop wah pedal.
In summary, George's tone is consistent throughout the entire record. He would change his style of playing per each individual song, but refused to alter the gear in any form. "How many times have people gone into the studio, had something nice, changed it and gone for something different and never got it back? George recounts. Barriers were put up forming a little room in the corner of the studio where George positioned himself to record. "I had 17 guitars back there and all these pedals and this huge amount of stuff. Nobody wanted to go back there. I had cups and junk. I said, 'Do not clean this up.' (Producer) Keith Olsen was going nuts, saying, 'Just let them come in and clean it, George.' I said, 'No, that'll spoil it.'"
Along with the ESPs, and PRS guitars in the studio, a sitar and a G&L Comanche (which would also be included on "Sacred Groove") found their way into the mix of junk behind that barricade of George's. Also in the studio came a peculiar amp known as the Trainwreck, built by Ken Fisher of Colonia, NJ. This will also figure into George's "Sacred Groove" solo album.