Gear_Junky wrote: ↑Sun Nov 08, 2020 12:48 am
Nice score! I personally never had an amp like the Mustang GTX, but I feel like they absolutely have their use - I wish I had something like that growing up. I love "all the inputs and outputs you could ever need for recording - and in stereo!" - to me that says that someone was THINKING about details, always a good sign.
I have a Mustang II V2, and that's a really good amp, which is pretty universally praised. The GT series was pretty much a repackaging of the original Mustang amps with on-board editing, and I didn't consider that enough of an upgrade to consider buying one (and I was hardly alone in that assessment. Those amps got
roasted when they came out). The GTX series is what the GT series
should have been, but I got a Super Champ X2 in the meantime, and I absolutely
love that amp. When the GTX series came out, I didn't really care. Tubes beat Bluetooth and Wifi any day, as far as I'm concerned.
I wouldn't say I'm a Fender "fanboy", but I sure do end up gravitating toward their amps, and I do think their bass amps beat the pants off of any other brand in their price range (I'd prefer a Markbass or Phil Jones amp, but those things
start at like $800). The venerable old brands like Ampeg and Acoustic are mere shadows of what they used to be. Acoustic is a Guitar Center house brand now, with absolutely no connection to the brand's past, and Ampeg has changed hands so many times, I have no idea who owns them anymore. The last time I was shopping for a new bass amp, Ampeg seemed to have pretty bad QC (at least when it came to combo amps). It seemed like every one I plugged in to (at several stores) had something wrong with it, and I ended up buying a Fender Bassman instead. Ampeg may have sorted their issues by now, or moved their manufacturing (they were made in Vietnam at the time), but the perceptual damage is done. Every time I look at a modern Ampeg now, I think: "glitchy and unreliable".
Gear_Junky wrote: ↑Sun Nov 08, 2020 12:48 am SamAsh - the main culprit of my early onset of GAS back in the 90's when they first opened in town (before GC). The floor manager was a good guitar player and very friendly and always willing to cut a deal. I've NEVER purchased an instrument or amp at asking price there (maybe small stuff like strings and drum sticks). They've always been willing to come down. And their in-store guitar tech was a real luthier and one of 2 people in town with reputation that you could trust your instrument to them. Or so I've heard
OMB wrote: ↑Sun Nov 08, 2020 12:50 pm
They are just there. That is a pretty good assessment of SA. I used to buy stuff from them but they hardly ever offered a decent deal PLUS I had to pay taxes. But overall not a bad store.
I never set foot in a Sam Ash until I moved to California. The one near me has a few "characters" working there... The "almost rock star guy" who's always talking about the famous players he's "friends" with, and wants to show you pictures of himself with various rock stars (this is LA, you're
gonna see rock stars in guitar stores... It's not a big deal). Then there's the obligatory "know it all guy", who always talks to you like you just started playing yesterday, and you desperately
need him to tell you what you "really" want. Then there's the "high pressure guy" who stands over your shoulder while you're trying to check out a guitar, and keeps interrupting you to tell you what factory the guitar was made in, and how special it is, and insists that if you don't buy it RIGHT NOW, it''ll be long gone if you come back tomorrow... or sometimes he says that
he's gonna buy it if you don't.
Whenever you ask for a discount, they always offer some pittance, and act like you've really got a lot of nerve for asking. That's why I thought I'd have better luck calling their 800 number.
I know it's not uncommon to encounter these personality types working at a guitar store, but you don't usually see all three in the same place... sometimes at the same time!
It doesn't make me feel like Sam Ash is a purchase destination... Just a place to try out gear, and then order it from Sweetwater. Unfortunately, Sweetwater has to charge tax now, which kind of levels the playing field.