
kannibul
New member
gmcelroy":3c2dd7ft said:If you could have your pick of either a Marshall Silver Jubilee 100w Head or a Soldano SLO which would you choose and why?
SLO...no contest.
gmcelroy":3c2dd7ft said:If you could have your pick of either a Marshall Silver Jubilee 100w Head or a Soldano SLO which would you choose and why?
stratotone":34o1qm4w said:glpg80":34o1qm4w said:rupe":34o1qm4w said:Aren't you a big 5150 fan? I find it odd that you wouldn't care for the amp that inspired it.glpg80":34o1qm4w said:Ancient Alien":34o1qm4w said:Can I vote for neither?
If I had to choose, I guess it would be an SLO so I can sell it like I did my last 2 for a profit![]()
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exactly. i have played a SLO 100.
it was an over-hyped 5150 II. i can dig the same exact tone out of my own amplifier, with a footswitchable effects loop, resonance/presence controls for individual channels, and at about a 3rd of the price of a SLO - and actually a bit more saturation on my side which works out great for solo's.
the SLO is not known for being forgiving - but tone wise i was highly dissappointed. i expected more. and the SLO did not deliver.
anyone looking for that tone i would tell them to play a few 5150 II's and tell them to get the one that sounded best out of the bunch for less than a 1/3 of the price of a SLO with more usable features.
Not to argue with you again, but don't you think there's a difference between owning an amp and using it as intended vs playing one at GC that could have been biased wrong, had bad tubes, been playing through a shit cab, etc?
I'm not posting this as an SLO fanboy, because I don't own one anymore... but it just doesn't seem a fair comparison IMHO - an amp you know intimately vs one that you spent 10 minutes on in a music store.
Pete
diagrammatiks":2n2nemwc said:hmm interesting discussion.
I'd vote for the slo.
I'll throw another opinion into the pot. I haven't liked any of the 5150s I've heard or played. They have a fair bit of saturation definitely but they don't have the string to string clarity that the slo has. There's always a fuzziness there that doesn't go away. I wouldn't mind having both but if I had a choice I'd grab a SLO before a 5150/6505.
This is a clip I recorded earlier for my own records after doing some set up on my prs. I'm not the greatest player so flame away if need be...but I've been chasing this crunch forever and the slo does it for me.
I'm surprised that James says it's one-dimensional though. I quite liked the clips in his 2009 shootout. I thought the character definitely changed depending on the guitar.
glpg80":1ydgfw5m said:diagrammatiks":1ydgfw5m said:hmm interesting discussion.
I'd vote for the slo.
I'll throw another opinion into the pot. I haven't liked any of the 5150s I've heard or played. They have a fair bit of saturation definitely but they don't have the string to string clarity that the slo has. There's always a fuzziness there that doesn't go away. I wouldn't mind having both but if I had a choice I'd grab a SLO before a 5150/6505.
This is a clip I recorded earlier for my own records after doing some set up on my prs. I'm not the greatest player so flame away if need be...but I've been chasing this crunch forever and the slo does it for me.
I'm surprised that James says it's one-dimensional though. I quite liked the clips in his 2009 shootout. I thought the character definitely changed depending on the guitar.
there are alot of 5150 models that exist. i mentioned souly the 5150 II out of all of the series. was this the model that you have played? if so, at what volumes were you playing it at?
if any other model is to be put against the SLO, the SLO wins in that tonal battle regardless of the comments im making below about all 5150's because you are right - the gain tone of the SLO is very defined and also tweakable with the presence knob.
as for the fuzz:
you need a good set of tubes in the amplifier both pre and power to even the playing field, the amplifier needs to be biased properly with no characteristics of crossover distortion, and you need to be moving some serious air with all 5150's to do them justice and get out of the low volume fuzz characteristics. they were not built to be bedroom amplifiers - their design is made for higher volume playing.
if you do this you will be seriously surprised at the outcomes of each - especially the 5150 II's. enough that the SLO was not worth the extra money and by a long shot to me.
glpg80":3myff6ua said:diagrammatiks":3myff6ua said:hmm interesting discussion.
I'd vote for the slo.
I'll throw another opinion into the pot. I haven't liked any of the 5150s I've heard or played. They have a fair bit of saturation definitely but they don't have the string to string clarity that the slo has. There's always a fuzziness there that doesn't go away. I wouldn't mind having both but if I had a choice I'd grab a SLO before a 5150/6505.
This is a clip I recorded earlier for my own records after doing some set up on my prs. I'm not the greatest player so flame away if need be...but I've been chasing this crunch forever and the slo does it for me.
I'm surprised that James says it's one-dimensional though. I quite liked the clips in his 2009 shootout. I thought the character definitely changed depending on the guitar.
there are alot of 5150 models that exist. i mentioned souly the 5150 II out of all of the series. was this the model that you have played? if so, at what volumes were you playing it at?
if any other model is to be put against the SLO, the SLO wins in that tonal battle regardless of the comments im making below about all 5150's because you are right - the gain tone of the SLO is very defined and also tweakable with the presence knob.
as for the fuzz:
you need a good set of tubes in the amplifier both pre and power to even the playing field, the amplifier needs to be biased properly with no characteristics of crossover distortion, and you need to be moving some serious air with all 5150's to do them justice and get out of the low volume fuzz characteristics. they were not built to be bedroom amplifiers - their design is made for higher volume playing.
if you do this you will be seriously surprised at the outcomes of each - especially the 5150 II's. enough that the SLO was not worth the extra money and by a long shot to me.
glpg80":28ddcmlz said:rupe":28ddcmlz said:Aren't you a big 5150 fan? I find it odd that you wouldn't care for the amp that inspired it.glpg80":28ddcmlz said:Ancient Alien":28ddcmlz said:Can I vote for neither?
If I had to choose, I guess it would be an SLO so I can sell it like I did my last 2 for a profit![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
+1
exactly. i have played a SLO 100.
it was an over-hyped 5150 II. i can dig the same exact tone out of my own amplifier, with a footswitchable effects loop, resonance/presence controls for individual channels, and at about a 3rd of the price of a SLO - and actually a bit more saturation on my side which works out great for solo's.
the SLO is not known for being forgiving - but tone wise i was highly dissappointed. i expected more. and the SLO did not deliver.
anyone looking for that tone i would tell them to play a few 5150 II's and tell them to get the one that sounded best out of the bunch for less than a 1/3 of the price of a SLO with more usable features.
gmcelroy":3bnsx982 said:I currently own an SLO w/ the depth mod and have owned a couple of 5150 II's in the past. I will definately agree that the 5150 II's lead tones at a loud volume level are very close to the SLO's but the 5150 II's clean/crunch channel is fairly flat and dull when compared to the SLO.
stratotone":3bnsx982 said:How did you know the SLO you tried at GC had good tubes and was properly biased?
Pete
glpg80":24zb8yd7 said:diagrammatiks":24zb8yd7 said:hmm interesting discussion.
I'd vote for the slo.
I'll throw another opinion into the pot. I haven't liked any of the 5150s I've heard or played. They have a fair bit of saturation definitely but they don't have the string to string clarity that the slo has. There's always a fuzziness there that doesn't go away. I wouldn't mind having both but if I had a choice I'd grab a SLO before a 5150/6505.
This is a clip I recorded earlier for my own records after doing some set up on my prs. I'm not the greatest player so flame away if need be...but I've been chasing this crunch forever and the slo does it for me.
I'm surprised that James says it's one-dimensional though. I quite liked the clips in his 2009 shootout. I thought the character definitely changed depending on the guitar.
there are alot of 5150 models that exist. i mentioned souly the 5150 II out of all of the series. was this the model that you have played? if so, at what volumes were you playing it at?
if any other model is to be put against the SLO, the SLO wins in that tonal battle regardless of the comments im making below about all 5150's because you are right - the gain tone of the SLO is very defined and also tweakable with the presence knob.
as for the fuzz:
you need a good set of tubes in the amplifier both pre and power to even the playing field, the amplifier needs to be biased properly with no characteristics of crossover distortion, and you need to be moving some serious air with all 5150's to do them justice and get out of the low volume fuzz characteristics. they were not built to be bedroom amplifiers - their design is made for higher volume playing.
if you do this you will be seriously surprised at the outcomes of each - especially the 5150 II's. enough that the SLO was not worth the extra money and by a long shot to me.
glpg80":22094s3d said:rupe":22094s3d said:Aren't you a big 5150 fan? I find it odd that you wouldn't care for the amp that inspired it.glpg80":22094s3d said:Ancient Alien":22094s3d said:Can I vote for neither?
If I had to choose, I guess it would be an SLO so I can sell it like I did my last 2 for a profit![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
+1
exactly. i have played a SLO 100.
it was an over-hyped 5150 II. i can dig the same exact tone out of my own amplifier, with a footswitchable effects loop, resonance/presence controls for individual channels, and at about a 3rd of the price of a SLO - and actually a bit more saturation on my side which works out great for solo's.
the SLO is not known for being forgiving - but tone wise i was highly dissappointed. i expected more. and the SLO did not deliver.
anyone looking for that tone i would tell them to play a few 5150 II's and tell them to get the one that sounded best out of the bunch for less than a 1/3 of the price of a SLO with more usable features.
Mr. Willy":9j2q62cs said:glpg80":9j2q62cs said:rupe":9j2q62cs said:Aren't you a big 5150 fan? I find it odd that you wouldn't care for the amp that inspired it.glpg80":9j2q62cs said:Ancient Alien":9j2q62cs said:Can I vote for neither?
If I had to choose, I guess it would be an SLO so I can sell it like I did my last 2 for a profit![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
+1
exactly. i have played a SLO 100.
it was an over-hyped 5150 II. i can dig the same exact tone out of my own amplifier, with a footswitchable effects loop, resonance/presence controls for individual channels, and at about a 3rd of the price of a SLO - and actually a bit more saturation on my side which works out great for solo's.
the SLO is not known for being forgiving - but tone wise i was highly dissappointed. i expected more. and the SLO did not deliver.
anyone looking for that tone i would tell them to play a few 5150 II's and tell them to get the one that sounded best out of the bunch for less than a 1/3 of the price of a SLO with more usable features.
An SLO is an over-hyped 5150 II?![]()
You're funny.
James Lugo":r8573f4i said:Depends on what you do. If 80s mid rangy stuff is your thing the SLO gets that. I had an SLO and an Avenger for years, IMO they are not that great as studio amps. Very one dimensional sounding and the sound is very dated. A good Marshall will always sound relevant to one degree or another. The SLO is a time capsule IMO.
glpg80":r8573f4i said:rupe":r8573f4i said:Aren't you a big 5150 fan? I find it odd that you wouldn't care for the amp that inspired it.glpg80":r8573f4i said:Ancient Alien":r8573f4i said:Can I vote for neither?
If I had to choose, I guess it would be an SLO so I can sell it like I did my last 2 for a profit![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
+1
exactly. i have played a SLO 100.
it was an over-hyped 5150 II. i can dig the same exact tone out of my own amplifier, with a footswitchable effects loop, resonance/presence controls for individual channels, and at about a 3rd of the price of a SLO - and actually a bit more saturation on my side which works out great for solo's.
the SLO is not known for being forgiving - but tone wise i was highly dissappointed. i expected more. and the SLO did not deliver.
anyone looking for that tone i would tell them to play a few 5150 II's and tell them to get the one that sounded best out of the bunch for less than a 1/3 of the price of a SLO with more usable features.
James Lugo":jxer87oj said:Depends on what you do. If 80s mid rangy stuff is your thing the SLO gets that. I had an SLO and an Avenger for years, IMO they are not that great as studio amps. Very one dimensional sounding and the sound is very dated. A good Marshall will always sound relevant to one degree or another. The SLO is a time capsule IMO.
glpg80":jxer87oj said:rupe":jxer87oj said:Aren't you a big 5150 fan? I find it odd that you wouldn't care for the amp that inspired it.glpg80":jxer87oj said:Ancient Alien":jxer87oj said:Can I vote for neither?
If I had to choose, I guess it would be an SLO so I can sell it like I did my last 2 for a profit![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
+1
exactly. i have played a SLO 100.
it was an over-hyped 5150 II. i can dig the same exact tone out of my own amplifier, with a footswitchable effects loop, resonance/presence controls for individual channels, and at about a 3rd of the price of a SLO - and actually a bit more saturation on my side which works out great for solo's.
the SLO is not known for being forgiving - but tone wise i was highly dissappointed. i expected more. and the SLO did not deliver.
anyone looking for that tone i would tell them to play a few 5150 II's and tell them to get the one that sounded best out of the bunch for less than a 1/3 of the price of a SLO with more usable features.
glpg80":3iiolpzc said:rupe":3iiolpzc said:Aren't you a big 5150 fan? I find it odd that you wouldn't care for the amp that inspired it.glpg80":3iiolpzc said:Ancient Alien":3iiolpzc said:Can I vote for neither?
If I had to choose, I guess it would be an SLO so I can sell it like I did my last 2 for a profit![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
+1
exactly. i have played a SLO 100.
it was an over-hyped 5150 II. i can dig the same exact tone out of my own amplifier, with a footswitchable effects loop, resonance/presence controls for individual channels, and at about a 3rd of the price of a SLO - and actually a bit more saturation on my side which works out great for solo's.
the SLO is not known for being forgiving - but tone wise i was highly dissappointed. i expected more. and the SLO did not deliver.
anyone looking for that tone i would tell them to play a few 5150 II's and tell them to get the one that sounded best out of the bunch for less than a 1/3 of the price of a SLO with more usable features.
James Lugo":b01x2a2k said:Very one dimensional sounding and the sound is very dated...... The SLO is a time capsule IMO.
zuel69":11r7zk9w said:You need to try another SLO, hydrox cookies are not oreos...you like what you like and thats fine, it's just that most people will not agree on your opinion which you so humbly throw around.