The place to be when you've got a Valco, or just gotta get one!
I have been collecting, repairing and restoring tube amps for 22
years and have owned or repaired just about any amp you can think
of including: Fender Tweed, Blackface and Silverface, nearly any
Valco built amp ever made including National Dobro, Ampeg, Gibson,
Guild, Hiwatt, Marshall, Sound City, Magnatone Silvertone
Danelectro..... you name it and I've probably owned one, played one
or had one on my bench for repair. I have also been a guitar player
for over 40 years and as a player who performs on a regular basis,
I understand how amps perform in "Real World Gig Conditions" as
opposed to just sounding good at lower volumes around the house. So
every amp that comes here for service, repair or tweaking is always
"Guitar Tested" to make sure that it meets that standard. I offer
custom amp builds, using my own circuits or other public domain
circuits on a customer request basis. I use vintage correct parts
whenever possible, and carry in stock: tubes, transformers, carbon
comp resistors, tube sockets and most any part needed to get your
amp in top shape and back to spec. I don't recone speakers,
or carry new replacements here, but can normally get them in
quickly if needed. I also use several reconing services, including
WeberVST and Neals Speaker Service to get your old tired stock
speaker sounding the way it is supposed to if it's required.
There are alot of people today who do tube amp work - why send your
amp to us? With 20 years of experience and not only an ear
for what your tube amp should sound like and how it should perform,
I also try to get to the core of what you are expecting from your
amp. The more details I can get from you, for instance, what type
of music you play, what guitars you use, style of music, size of
venue you normally play at, things you are looking for in an amp,
and the things you are NOT looking for, the better I can tweak your
amp to make it better suited for your needs.
Some amps give you more room to tweak than others and this is where
experience really counts. The wrong tweak in the wrong amp and
problems happen - like oscillations at frequencies you can't
hear,motorboating, ghost notes etc. I don't do "hole-drilling
hack mods" for anyone - these old amps will be around long after
most of us are gone, and any tweak made is done with respect for
this. If your amp does get a tone tweak, it will be with the above
considerations in mind and can be put back to stock easily in the
future if that desire should arise. I also do strict "to the
schematic" repair and restoration work for those who want their
collectables to remain true to their vintage specs. I get many here
for repair that have had work done elsewhere, and due to
"misunderstandings" or a "previous effort to make your Valco sound
like a Fender" need to be professionally restored.
Standard rate is $60/hr. Inspection and diagnosis is a flat $50. I
will look over your amp when it arrives and e-mail or call you with
what I find and what repairs are needed. The $50 will go towards
the repair cost if you elect to have the amp repaired here.
Get the best your amp has to offer and consider sending it here for
your tube amp servicing or repair.
For more information or to send an amp for repair, contact me
at:
terry@valcoamp.com
muddobbertd@yahoo.com
Check out my Valco auctions on Ebay. Don't miss a chance to get some well-serviced amps and rare Valco parts. My seller name is muddobber5.
The Valco company has its roots in the National String Instrument Corporation, which was founded in 1927. The company is famous as the first manufacturer of resonator guitars, which were hugely popular in blues and (a bit later) bluegrass music. National merged with the Dobro company, another maker of resonator guitars, around 1932 to form the National Dobro Corporation. The company began producing electric instruments in the 1930s that included electric guitars, lap steels, mandolins and amplifiers. These pre-war electric instruments are fairly rare today, though the lap steels pop up with some regularity. The archtop bodies for the guitars were sourced from Regal and then from Kay, but the electronics were developed and manufactured by National-Dobro. The Supro brand name was introduced in the mid-‘30s for cheaper electric instruments. Read More >
© 2012 Created by Dan Burke.