
RedPlated
Well-known member
This came up local on Craigslist. Completely stock, untouched 1982 JCM 800 2204. 6550 version. Drove about 50 miles today and picked it up from a super nice guy who’s had it in storage for the last 5 years.
I have an 83’ 2204 that I modded myself and I think it sounds really good. That amp didn’t sound the best stock. This 82’ sounds so much better. These amps are just inconsistent...
I took the 82’ home, scrubbed the tolex, fixed some tears and scrapes and then went through the chassis. I put a pair of GE 6550 in it. It had some crusty Svetlanas in there. It had 8th gen Chinese preamp tubes. Not my favorite in these circuits, but good in some others. I ended up with a CP Mullard short plate in V1, a Tungsram in V2 and a Sovtek LPS in the PI.
I wanted to leave this amp completely untouched. However, it did have some flubby bass at full gain. I had discussed this with Dave Friedman the other day and he pointed out that the “hot shield” input method Marshall used on these kills treble and makes for loose bass. It runs from the high input jack to a 68k grid resistor then into a shielded cable to the grid on v1, with a shield to the plate. I replaced this with shielded coax from high input directly to the grid on v1, with a 33k resistor on the grid. I have the same setup on my 83’. This is relatively non-invasive and easily reversible.
What a difference the input made. Loose bass gone, more highs. Sounds so good. This is a great stock Marshall. For anyone else with a stock 800, I’d highly advise changing the input and remove the hot shield. It kills the tone.
I made a quick clip at very low volume. Running into my 72 Marshall 4x12 and wet dry wet into a TC Gmajor2 for some delay. Didn’t touch the amp, just worked the volume knob and pickups. Guitar is a Charvel Nitro Aged San Dimas. BKP Holy Diver bridge and Dimarzio Transition neck.
I have an 83’ 2204 that I modded myself and I think it sounds really good. That amp didn’t sound the best stock. This 82’ sounds so much better. These amps are just inconsistent...
I took the 82’ home, scrubbed the tolex, fixed some tears and scrapes and then went through the chassis. I put a pair of GE 6550 in it. It had some crusty Svetlanas in there. It had 8th gen Chinese preamp tubes. Not my favorite in these circuits, but good in some others. I ended up with a CP Mullard short plate in V1, a Tungsram in V2 and a Sovtek LPS in the PI.
I wanted to leave this amp completely untouched. However, it did have some flubby bass at full gain. I had discussed this with Dave Friedman the other day and he pointed out that the “hot shield” input method Marshall used on these kills treble and makes for loose bass. It runs from the high input jack to a 68k grid resistor then into a shielded cable to the grid on v1, with a shield to the plate. I replaced this with shielded coax from high input directly to the grid on v1, with a 33k resistor on the grid. I have the same setup on my 83’. This is relatively non-invasive and easily reversible.
What a difference the input made. Loose bass gone, more highs. Sounds so good. This is a great stock Marshall. For anyone else with a stock 800, I’d highly advise changing the input and remove the hot shield. It kills the tone.
I made a quick clip at very low volume. Running into my 72 Marshall 4x12 and wet dry wet into a TC Gmajor2 for some delay. Didn’t touch the amp, just worked the volume knob and pickups. Guitar is a Charvel Nitro Aged San Dimas. BKP Holy Diver bridge and Dimarzio Transition neck.
