Line 6 spinal puppet, Line 6 treadplate, 1968 plexi jump lead – Line 6 POD Farm UX1 User Manual

Page 102

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POD Farm 1.01 – Model Gallery

6•7

Line 6 Spinal Puppet

You know how, when you’re playing head-bangin’ music, you look out into the audience and see all

those heads bobbing up and down? Those are Spinal Puppets. Need we say more?

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Line 6 Treadplate

Looking for tight, high gain tone? The kind of sound that powers classic Metallica or Dream Theater

tracks? Then you’ve come to the right place, my friend. This model lets you dial in plenty of distortion

perfect for chunk-chunk-chunking, and also ready to power some mosh pit punking. Its tone controls

have plenty of range to let you scoop out your mids, or beef up the bottom for just the tone you need.

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1968 Plexi Jump Lead

Guitar playing is all about experimentation, isn’t it? That, and

finding all the possible ways to get more distortion out of whatever

gear you have at hand. One of the fun things you can do with

a Plexi is take a short guitar cable and jumper channel I and

channel II (as they’re frequently numbered) together for a little

extra saturation. Some guys loved this sound so much that they

pulled the chassis and permanently wired a jumper into the amp.

Being the obsessive/compulsive tone freaks we are, we just had

to give you the 1968 Plexi Jump Lead model to give you a sound

based on* of this setup.

* All product names used in this document are trademarks of their respective owners, which are in no

way associated or affiliated with Line 6. These product names, descriptions and images are used solely to

identify the specific products whose tones and sounds were studied during Line 6’s sound model development.

MARSHALL

®

is a registered trademark of Marshall Amplification PLC.

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1968 Plexi Lead 100

The 1968 Plexi Lead 100 is modeled after* the infamous ‘68 Marshall

®

‘Plexi’ Super Lead — coveted by

tone connoisseurs the world over. We literally scoured the world for this particular amp, finally finding

a great example of a Super Lead languishing (we like to think fate preserved it for us) in Holland. By

the time this amp was built (ca. 1968), Marshall

®

had completely changed the circuitry away from

the Fender

®

6L6 power tube heritage and moved to an EL34 tube. Another major tone difference was

due to the necessary output & power supply transformer changes. All this mucking about added up to

create a tone forever linked with Rock Guitar. Amps of this era didn’t have any sort of master volume

control, so to get the sound you’d have to crank your Super Lead to max — just the thing to help you

really make friends with the neighbors. Hendrix used Marshalls of this era; a decade later Van Halen’s

first two records owed their “brown sound” to a 100-watt Plexi (Our Super Lead, in fact, has the ‘lay

down’ transformer that was unique to ‘68 models, the same as Hendrix and Van Halen’s Marshalls).

To get a crunch sound out of a Plexi, you would likely crank the input volume and tone controls (to

10!) You’ll find that, in keeping with our “make-it-sound-a-whole-lot-like-the-original” concept, this

model is set up to do pretty darned near the same thing.

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