

Now equipped with reverb and a master volume, the AC10C1 is the perfect companion for the home, studio or stage.
#VOX AC10 REISSUE PORTABLE#
I hope you find what you are looking for. More portable than the AC15 and more powerful than the AC4, the AC10C1 features the classic Top Boost tone circuit that provides an array of classic and modern tones. However the fender takes all my pedals and effects more in a predictable fashion where as both my voxes may be a little pickier and/or the effects settings are quite different compared to the fender. I also have a fender blues deluxe reissue and I like it, but my desired clean sound isn’t very Fender clean. I also apologize as my comparison is not like yours. I'll probably keep the greenback in the Orange. Anyhow it all comes back to whether you like the vox sound or not. 1 I have a Marshall Class 5 2nd gen, a Vox AC10 (reissue), both with stock speakers, and an Orange Rocker 15 that has been upgraded from the stock 'Voice of the 3rd World' to a Greenback. Much easier to dial in my tone whether it is practice or with the band. The earliest version came out in a 1x10' combo (about the only thing it has in common with Vox's current AC10C1), but guitarists know it best, and have seen it most, in the tasteful 2x10' version, aka the AC10 Twinand if it's in fawn Rexine, so much the better. I think there was a thread on here a while back titled “gig tone vs practice tone”, and I learned a lot from it.įast forward to now, I recently purchased an AC30C2x with the celestion alnico blues, and to me it is definitely an upgrade. So of course I would adjust my settings with the band and it would sound glorious.Īfter practice, I would keep the settings the same, take it home, once again, by myself and I would say, “wow, I was playing with these settings? By itself it sounded like garbage”Īnyhow. I would transfer those same settings for gigs and practice sessions and it wouldn’t cut through.

This is exactly what the new edition, the Vox AC10C1 Custom, offers. It took me a long time to realize that I thought it didnt sound the way I wanted it to, especially since I would dial in my tone by myself, in my room. The AC10 was one of the first amplifiers to sport the name VOX in the early 60s, and has been known ever since for delivering a rich tube sound at a modest volume. Featuring a Rich Blue vinyl covering and classic. It originally came with the wharfedale speakers and I eventually swapped those out with a weber silver bell and blue dog. The Vox AC10C1 Rich Blue is a limited edition version of the hugely popular AC10C1 guitar amplifier. I have been playing a vox ac30cc2 for about 10 years. I am seeing a lot of folks not bonding with vox amps and I get it.
