Line 6 3.7 User Manual

Page 143

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Line 6 GearBox 3.7 – Model Gallery

8•5

the kind of tone that the Bassman® can deliver at higher gain settings, you had to crank it up loud

enough to do some serious damage to anyone who might be standing close by. Now you can get that

kind of tone at a bedroom or studio level — or even through your headphones! Try a Drive setting of

about 4 or 5 — it’s guaranteed to dredge up the best R & B licks you know.

* FENDER® and BASSMAN® are registered trademarks of Fender Musical Instruments Corporation

and are in no way associated or affiliated with Line 6. These product names, descriptions and images are

provided for the sole purpose of identifying the specific products that were studied during Line 6’s sound model

development.

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1964 Blackface ‘Lux

The Holy Grail for many blues, country, and “roots” players has

been a blackface Fender® Deluxe Reverb®. After listening to

quite a few candidates back when we were seeking the ultimate

Deluxe Reverb® for our 1964 Blackface ‘Lux model to be

based on*, we stumbled upon an extremely cool ‘64 Deluxe

Reverb®. We still haven’t found one better.

Most players love a Deluxe Reverb® when it’s turned up

to about 7 for a nice gritty sound that cleans up when you

back off your guitar’s volume knob just a little. Notice how

the tone control response changes as this Amp Model’s Drive

is changed: clean settings are crisp and present, while more

driven settings will mellow the high end. This is typical of

what you get from a Deluxe Reverb® and is nicely captured here. The Deluxe Reverb® itself has only

Bass and Treble controls, leaving us, once again, with the prospect of a couple knobs with nothing to

say for themselves. But fear not; in this case, we’ve set up the model’s Middle knob so you can add some

post-Amp Model Midrange contouring for a little more flexibility, while Presence adds, well, Presence.

Once again, set the Middle knob to its “neutral” 12 o’clock position and the Presence knob to 0 for the

classic Deluxe sound. Tweaked up right, this tone will cut through and sing. We jacked into Input 1 of

the Vibrato Channel to get this model cooked up.

* FENDER® and DELUXE REVERB® are registered trademarks of Fender Musical Instruments

Corporation and are in no way associated or affiliated with Line 6. These product names, descriptions and

images are provided for the sole purpose of identifying the specific products that were studied during Line 6’s

sound model development.

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1967 Class A-30 Top Boost

The 1967 Class A-30 Top Boost model is based on* a Vox®

AC 30. Music was changing in the early ‘60s and guitarists

were asking for more brilliance & twang. So the Jennings

Company, makers of Vox® amps, decided to add Treble and

Bass controls (and an extra 12AX7 gain stage, incidentally)

in addition to the Treble Cut knob it already had (which in

actuality was a sliding bandpass filter that always seemed like

it was working backwards); this additional circuit became

known as Top Boost.

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