This is a serious question to which I'm hoping to discover the answer, not an 'aren't vintage amps great' thread.
I have a stock 1977 2103. The original McKenzie speakers aren't great, so we'll forget about them. I had a chance to take it along to a friend's. He has a 2203x, a 1960TV with UK Greenbacks, and an oversized Blackstar cab with Vintage 30s, so we thought it would be fun to do a back to back comparison. The main difference is that the reissue has, at least at the volume levels we tried it at, a harsh treble response that you can almost feel rather than hear. It's also a little thin sounding. The 77 has a nice treble and a bit more punch and body to the tone. These differences were apparent through both cabs.
The only difference in the circuit as far as I am aware is that the 2103 has an extra cap across the mid control to help tune the tone for use in the open back combo format. If mine has this cap then it's not on the pot so it must be on the PCB somewhere. Could that be responsible? If not, what is it? Maybe Marshall chose to voice the amp like that for some reason? They claim the 2203x was patterned after the best sounding 2203 they could find.
Both amps are biased to circa 33ma. The test was done using the same guitars and even the same cables to minimize differences. I'm really curious about this.
I have a stock 1977 2103. The original McKenzie speakers aren't great, so we'll forget about them. I had a chance to take it along to a friend's. He has a 2203x, a 1960TV with UK Greenbacks, and an oversized Blackstar cab with Vintage 30s, so we thought it would be fun to do a back to back comparison. The main difference is that the reissue has, at least at the volume levels we tried it at, a harsh treble response that you can almost feel rather than hear. It's also a little thin sounding. The 77 has a nice treble and a bit more punch and body to the tone. These differences were apparent through both cabs.
The only difference in the circuit as far as I am aware is that the 2103 has an extra cap across the mid control to help tune the tone for use in the open back combo format. If mine has this cap then it's not on the pot so it must be on the PCB somewhere. Could that be responsible? If not, what is it? Maybe Marshall chose to voice the amp like that for some reason? They claim the 2203x was patterned after the best sounding 2203 they could find.
Both amps are biased to circa 33ma. The test was done using the same guitars and even the same cables to minimize differences. I'm really curious about this.
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