Fender Princeton Chorus
|
Page:
1 2
(Show 10 | 25 | 50 | 100 reviews per page)
|
Showing 1 -
100
of 180 reviews
|
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/18/2009
at 06:20pm
by Guitaripper
Features
:
10
I purchased this red knob amp new in 1989 for $350 after much research and haggeling with local music stores. I wanted a versatal amp that I could just plug into and play without needing a lot of stomp boxes to get the soud I was looking for; good clean to slightly gritty, sought of that Beatles "I've got a feeling" sound. My amp at the time was a 1967 Fender Delux Reverb "Black Face", great amp but not easy to get the sound I was after without cranking it to ear bleeding volumns or using a tube screemer. I was also looking for a good clean jazz sound that my deluxe could not produce with my Les Paul.
The Princeston Chorus provided me with both as well as the most beautiful stero chorus that I have ever heard. It has far exceeded my expextations and as it approaches it's 20th birthday I am blown away to see how popular it has become with other players.
My other amps are the 67 deluxe reverb and a 2007 Fender Blues Deluxe Re-issue; all are great for different reasond but for clean that stays together without sounding solid state the Prinston Chorus wins hands down.
I have been playing since I was 7 and am 48 now, I love 60's rock / blues, Clapton, Buddy Guy, BB King, Beatles, as well as SRV, Hendricks, Steely Dan. I've been in bands, played gigs, but nowadays, I sit out on the back deck and jamb with a friend or two once in a while but mostly play for my own satisfaction. As far as power goes, it's not as loud as my Black Face and my Blues deluxe blows both away. As far as features, it has all I need for what I play and I have an RP-90 for when I need more and a drummer that I can controll.
Sound Quality
:
10
Gets a bit noisy when you turn the gain up but not more then other amps.
I play a 2007 Gibson Les Paul Blond Beauty Standard (another love story}, a 1982 Ibanaz Artist AC (striped to natural and beautfuly refinished) and a 1997 Fender Strat Deluxe.
As I said abouve, This amp sounds natural and clean at high voulms, perfect for jazzy chords (John Lennon would love this amp).
I think that the limiter is a fantastic controll for smoothing the gain and adding endless sustain at high gain settings. I also love the touch sensitive dynamics of this amp, it reacts like a fender tube amp.
Reliability
:
9
Two things have happenend in the las twenty years; the grill cloth tore so I bought origional Blackface Fender grill cloth and replace it, it looks sooo much better then the origional cloth and looks great next to my blackface. The second thing was the volume poy and the master volumn pot got srcatchie. I am please to pass along a little trick that fixed the problem, I removed the head and blew out the pots with my compressor and sprayed a drop of WD-40 in each. If they fail again I will replace them, I have done it before on Fender amps (replaced the linear taper volumn and master on my blues deluxe with Fender audio taper for better controll of volumn at lower settings). As I have indicated above I have a 42 yr old black face (3rd owner) and it still plays and sounds great with minimal maintenance, Fender still build quality amps.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to use it and I hope I never will, at 20yrs old I will take care of repairs myself or take it to a trustworthy tec for things I cannot handle if the need arises.
Overall Rating
:
10
This amp is a 10 in every aspect, it's intuitive controlls allows quick and easy dial in and tweaking of the sound I am looking for.
If it were stolen or lost then we would need to talk about my gun collection. Other products? I love fender amps, not all ( I hate the new DSP junk) but the three that I have sound boutique enough to me.
Is there anytrhing I wish it had? I don't know green LED's instead of red? No, I can think of nothing, it is by far the best SS amp that I have ever heard and easily compares to two of the best sounding tube amps that I have ever heard.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/17/2009
at 11:26am
by Kenny
Features
:
8
Do not know the year, I bought it off of ebay. It is made in Mexico, as if that makes a difference. Two 10 inch speakers. This amp fits my needs very well. I play country, gospel and Christian. The clean channel is super. The gain channel is OK. The stereo chorus is the best I have ever used. This is two amps in one having two power amplifiers, 25 watts each, therefore creating the stereo sound. Don't let tha wattage scare you this amp gets plenty loud! As stated in the manual this is "virtually" a two channel amp, but not exactly. If it had EQ's for the gain channel it would have received a 10. I never use effects loops, but this has a set of mono and stereo loops. The headphone jack doubles as a line out, I do like and use that. The presence and limiter knobs help the gain channel and I do like the mid-boost button. You can get several tonal options. The reverb is signature Fender. I use this amp at churches and small parties and outdoor functions. Has plenty of power for me. It is solid state, but don't let that bother you. Light weight, easy to haul around. I think it weighs 38 lbs.
Sound Quality
:
9
This amp has the sound I have been looking for for, in a small package! I use strats and teles. All with stock single coils. I have never played a guitar with humbuckers through it so I have no idea how that would sound. For an idea how the clean channel sounds go to YouTube and enter Don Rich Buckaroo. With my tele I can match his sound perfectly! I love the Chimey sound of the clean channel on a Fender amp. My father had a twin reverb and this amp can sound just as good as that, just not as loud. It has a SMALL amount of hum, and I do mean SMALL. A pleasant surprise since I use single coils. As I stated before the stereo chorus is luscious! Of course when the amp has chorus in the name you would expect this. I don't play at high volumes so I don't know if the clean channel distorts of not. I don't care if it does. I haven't had the volume louder than 5 and I don't want to stand directly in front of it then! If you play bang your head slap your momma stuff SKIP this amp. The gain channel works for me I just wish it had a separate EQ. When I use the gain channel I barely turn the gain up, just enough to give it a little fuzz. I like it, some don't. Thats why they make so many different amps. People cannot believe such loud and wonderful sounds come out of so small a package.
Reliability
:
10
I don't own a back-up amp. I have never had a problem. I bought it off of eBay and when it was delivered the box looked as if it had been rolled down a mountain and drug behind the truck! Pulled it out of the box, plugged it in, turned it on, worked perfectly and has for quite some time now. For reliability you cannot beat solid state. I have no idea how it was treated before I got it and have no idea how old it is. It does have a few scrapes and tears in the tolex, but I don't think that is from abuse just use. If an amp is hauled around it is going to show it. I never worry about it breaking down. I guess it could break down. Only the Shadow Knows! Oops I'm showing my age now.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never used it.
Overall Rating
:
9
I have been playing for 37 years. I own to much gear to list, just ask my wife! If I lost this amp I would go directly to eBay and find another. My favorite thing about this amp, other than the clean channel, is the weight. I'm to old and stove up to lug an 80 lb amp around. I have played through a myriad of amps over the years and I can tell you, for my taste in music, Fender amps are the best. If I had a roadie I would probably get a twin reverb, but at this point in the game I don't see that happening! If I could change one thing I would add an EQ on the gain channel. If you are reading this then you are interested in one of these amps. Just remember that " A Great Sounding Amp!" is subjective. The only way I know to find out if you like an amp or not is to plug YOUR guitar into it and play.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/09/2009
at 10:21pm
by Woody
Features
:
8
Mid-90's MIM model. You should know the basic specs by now. I'll make note, though of the features that I take into consideration in giving my rating: Really only one channel with an overdrive button, gain knob and shared EQ. Nice limiter, however, for the overdrive and a presence knob. My favorite features are the spring reverb and all analog true stereo chorus. Never used the effects loops, did appreciate the headphone jack. It took me a long time to find useable tone with the overdrive. Lots of experimenting with the EQ (which needed to be adjusted quite differently than when playing clean) and limiter. Would be nice if it were a true two-channel amp with a second separate EQ for overdrive. Then it would be feasible to channel switch very smoothly in a performance setting.
Sound Quality
:
9
I played this amp with only a Gibson ES-135, 1996 model with P-100's. The clean sounds, as other previous reviewers have noted, are amazing. For a really nice jazz tone, I'd keep the bass EQ'd around 4, treble at 6ish, and the mids at 8. Add a touch of reverb and chorus depth and rate both set at 2. Playing through the neck pickup with flat-wound .11's sounded fantastic. Very lush, full sound.
However, and this for me was a big however, getting a consistently useable distorted sound was a chore. I play jazz, blues, alt country, and indy rock. For jazz and blues, this amp was fantastic. Not so much, though, for the slightly Wilco-esque distortion I was looking for. Also, I should note that I bought this amp primarily for home recording and practice. To get the distortion breakup I wanted and a tube-ish sustain (which IS possible thanks to the limiter), I had to play at volume levels much higher than my wife or my neighbors appreciated. If I were recording in a studio situation or playing jazz out at small venues, I would have probably kept this amp.
Reliability
:
9
Thick as a brick.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No contact with Fender is always good.
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing now for around 12 years, and am mainly an acoustic multi-instrumentalist and singer/songwriter recording from home. I own several Martins, a handmade banjo, and a Japanese carved top mandolin in addition to my Gibson ES-135.
I actually just traded away the Princeton Chorus to pick up a VOX 4ACTVH and accompanying 12" speaker cab. I decided that I wanted true tube distortion at much lower volume levels for home recording and practice that won't drive my wife (and baby on the way) crazy. I do already miss the clean sounds and the stereo chorus from the Princeton, but let me tell you, it's nice to switch the VOX's attenuator to 1/4 watt, crank the volume and tone and get pure tube saturation at reasonable home volume levels. Plus, set to 4 watts, the VOX has some nice clean headroom. So, I'm very much aware of the tradeoff I made, and could envision a scenario down the road when I might go out and score another Princeton Chorus (or ideally two to run in stereo) for small jazz gigs.
Bottom line for me is if you're looking for great cleans and dripping, swirling chorus for studio, rehearsal, or small gigs, if you can find one of these for around 200 bucks, you're getting a deal. However, if you're looking for a truly versatile home recording amp that can provide both cleans and easily dialed-up saturated distortion, look elsewhere.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/01/2009
at 09:51pm
by Richard Hegwood
Features
:
8
I do not know when this awesome amp was made. I got from my church who wasn't using it anymore because we converted to in-ear monitors. So this amp was in our little sound room collecting dust untill I took it home. It has two channels (Clean and Overdrive) with a chorus effect for both channels. Overall, really good amp. For a solid-state amp, this kicks butt! It is by far the best sounding solid-state that I have ever heard! I use it mainly at home and I crank it when my parents aren't home and it sings! I'm wanting to use it live but I'm gonna have to check with my worship leader for that. I wish it had delay and a crunch channel because in the gain channel it really only sounds great at a pretty high-gain setting.
Sound Quality
:
10
Well, I'm playing an Epiphone SG G-400 Vintage guitar with all stock pickups (for now.)It sounds pretty good. The clean channel is awesome! Especially with the chorus. It doesn't disort to bad at high volumes but I haven't used it live yet so I don't know. It, for a Fender solid-state, is good for metal, pop, and obviously country. The distortion is great! At high-gain settings it doesn't muddy up. But it is very wimpy when you have it below about 7. Other than that great sounding amp.
Reliability
:
6
We used this at church before and it, from what I know, is pretty reliable. It was pretty dusty when I got it because it was really never used after we swiched to in-ears. But, um... I guess it will do good in a medium sized live situation.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with Fender. I've owned this and I used to have the Frontman 15-G amp and it was okay... for an $80 amp.
Overall Rating
:
10
I haven't been playing very long at all. I can say safely that this is my best amp! (Especially compared to my Estaban G-10!) If it were stolen I don't know what I would do, I would be going crazy that's for sure. I don't have a whole lot of amp experience so I really can't tell you what I compare it with. I wish it had tubes and a seperate crunch channel. Good amp it was a huge blessing from GOD and I'm really happy with it.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 275.00 USED
Submitted 05/27/2009
at 07:37pm
by OnceFamous
Features
:
9
Fender Princeton Chorus Red Knob version. Basic Fender reverb, fantastic limiter for great sustain,2 channels,mid range button,presence knob. Used on stage and studio.
Sound Quality
:
10
I play Blues, Nostalgia Rock and Jazz. These amps "sing to you"! I've owned over 50 amps in my lifetime and this one goes in the top 5 of all of them (and there were many high dollar amps). Not noisy at all and has that classic Fender reverb. I've owned Roland Jazz Chorus and didnt like it as well as the great stereo sound of this amp.Lot's of head room for stage (and when it doesn't have enough, just mic it).You will not be dissapointed
Reliability
:
10
AAA+++ for reliability.
Customer Support
:
7
Fender goes hot and cold with customer support, But, they've never let me down.
Overall Rating
:
10
Playing Pro since the 60's. So, you know that I've played alot of amps.These amps were and are world class. But, as always, Fender decided to quit making them. Seems like every time that they have a winning product, they either discontinue it or change it.Bring these babies back! Especially the Red Knobs! I've owned both models, DSP and Red Knob and I like the Red Knob version alot better. If you can find or get your hands on one, BUY IT QUICKLY! They are slowly disapearing.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/14/2009
at 12:21am
by jon
Features
:
No Opinion
Red knob version, chorus, overdrive and reverb, fx loop mono and stereo, foot switch for chorus and overdrive.
Sound Quality
:
9
For a solid state amp it still had the gorgeous Fender tone I was after, slightly less warm than tube amps, but it packs more tone for the price than it really should, plus you won't have the extra expense of maintenance that comes with tube amps and it sounds good even at low volumes. With the volume turned up max without overdrive it remains clean, it is fine for practice and recording, but at gigs you might need reinforcement if you aren't going to be using the overdrive. Overall I was really impressed with it.
The chorus is another big selling point it is fantastic and better than any foot pedal chorus I have used. I imagine this will be due to the use of two spaced 10" Fender speakers used to create the effect in stereo, if you play a gig and need sound reinforcement, or record this amp with just one mic you will not get the chorus result you hear at source, you will need to mic both speakers.
Bass tone control is hardly needed, first get this amp off the floor on a stand, it gets rid of the muddy bass sound, but even when its off the floor you don't need to turn it up much, I use it on 2, higher than that just overpowers the balance that I'm after.
I don't rate the reverb on this amp, there's not enough control over it and it has a rather nasty tail to it, I'd recommend you use other outboard reverbs or inline fx pedals.
Not a fan of the overdrive either, just not the sound I'm after on its own, I think it suits some styles but nothing I like to play or record, BUT I have found though that if you mix it with other overdrive/distortion pedals you can get some great results, more than the sum of the parts, try it out.
FX loop was noisy when used, it might be the kit I used in between, it also seems to remove some of the tone, I checked this by running a cable straight (nothing in between) from in to out.
I have used single and humbucking pickup guitars from various manufacturers through it, haven't found one that didn't sound great through it.
Reliability
:
9
Mine's second hand and must be several years old, still working fine, although the foot switch isn't switching as well as it should, but this is expected after so much use.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed it
Overall Rating
:
9
I can recommend this amp whole heartedly for its gorgeous clean sound and chorus, it does that so well it more than eclipses the shortcomings with the overdrive and reverb and that's why I give it a 9.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 300 USED
Submitted 12/28/2008
at 12:58am
by Artemio (A.J.) Arciaga
Email: artemioarciaga<at>ymail dot com
Features
:
10
I dont know what year my amp was made, i bought mine in music-go-round in towson, m.d. a couple years ago but man this thing is cool. i love this amp and pretty much dont need anyother amps. this amp is extremly versatile. i am a blues player, have been playing guitar for about 6.5 years now and 1. there isnt anyother features i think it needs, it has everything and i can get any tone i want. (more than a transistor amp, and better sounding). 2. its tough. i always wanted a tube amp but when i tried this amp, i found that it was not only cheaper than a tube but when i realized it was solid state, i realized that the tone would practically never wane. and 3. it's freakin loud. people in my former apt. complex ACROSS THE PARKING LOT heard me when it was on 5.
Sound Quality
:
10
i have so far an epiphone wildkat with alnico v p90 pickups, an epiphone firebird studio with stock humpbuckers, and a heavily modified Squier Mongrel Strat (a 2002 bullet strat neck, '94 body, new pickguard, and Fender Custom shop Texas special pickups). this amp suits my playing style because my amp must have been used alot before so i kinda got that broken-in sound which is perfect for my kind of blues. so far the sound quality for me is excellent and not to mention this is very versatile, good for rhythm AND lead playing.
Reliability
:
10
i have not really gone gigging with this amp yet but this is honestly THE amp for me. i feel like i can depend on this amp for many years to come and i think i could use this amp without having to buy a backup. and this amp has never given me any problems whatsoever.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never used customer service but that probably says that its an amp that dosent really need much maintenance and that fender made an amp that is tough, excellent, and great quality.
Overall Rating
:
10
Overall i only have this question to ask, if this such a great amp, Why the hell did fender stop making it? its tough, reliable, great sounding, good value, i mean its a great amp overall and my favorite fender amp of all the amps i gave tried, its on the top of my list. need i say more
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/30/2008
at 03:14pm
by taraguitar
Features
:
7
I bought a mid 80's model (Red Knobs) from new and I'm still gigging with it. One of the best I've heard for clean sounds but not so good if you are after a harder edge / lots of distortion. The single most impressive point for this amp is how loud it can go while remaining crystal clear - its simply incredible.
Sound Quality
:
8
Reliability
:
10
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
8
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 200.00 USED
Submitted 08/10/2008
at 08:51pm
by Tristan
Email: ask4tristan at gmail<dot>com
Features
:
10
I own a late 80s Princeton Chorus (red knob). I gotta say, the features are awesome. Its got the usual array of tone controls and gain, but the limiter, presence, and chorus are great! Ill elaborate in the next category...
Sound Quality
:
9
I have my '08 Tele hooked up to it, and the resulting sound is amazing. I am a versatile player, and it suits all of my music. Its got variety, quality, and volume. I prefer tube, but for a solid state, this amp gets really close. Though, the sound has degraded, see reliability...
Reliability
:
8
I have used it with everything, even a bass guitar. Both the treble and reverb channels have a hiss. Its my fault, I abuse it, but I'd rather a little more out of it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to...
Overall Rating
:
9
Ive been playing for way too long, yet not even close to long enough, I collect guitars and amps, etc... So, For a solid state amp, its in the top of its class. Its definitely the best value. I would definitely take another one, and am very happy with it.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/15/2008
at 05:52pm
by Mcray
Features
:
10
The one I bought is a USA model made in 1996. The amp is plenty versatile if your not playing Metal. It's darn near perfect for blues or classic rock. The clean channel is just that, CLEAN. It has channel switching, clean or gain, effects loops, line out and headphone jack. I use this amp for recording and smaller gigs. It's perfect for me since I'm an old Blues player. Has more than enough power for smaller venues.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use this amp with a Fender Deluxe Strat. Thier a perfect mix. The amp set at clean is very quiet and has that Fender tone everyone searchs for. The chorus is second to none. Full and rich! If Fender put this in a pedal they could sell a million. The gain channel is good but you need to tweak it with the limiter. Once dialed in it's not bad at all. Like I said it's perfect for Blues or Classic Rock. Metal palyers need to look elsewhere.
Reliability
:
10
The amp seems to be built like a tank so I'm looking forward to many more years of service.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I have not had to use Fender support so I can't comment on thier support. But thats good if a product just keeps on ticking!
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing for 40 plus years. I can tell you if this amp got stolen I would be back on Ebay in a heartbeat to buy another. If you like the old Fender amp sound you love this model. It's not a tube amp but it's as warm as you'll get in a solid state.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 250 USED
Submitted 02/19/2008
at 01:54pm
by Johnny
Features
:
7
Most of what I can tell you about the features has already been posted. This is the Mexican made model and I'm sure the features are about the same as the USA model so my only concern is the craftmenship in side the amp, time will tell. The reverb sounds like a Fender amp should and the Chorus is okay, but I would rather have tremolo. Mono and Stereo FX loops are fine but would rather have a exention speaker out (Mono). I would like to point out one misconseption, this amp has two 25 watt power amps, some call it a 50 watt amp, it's not 50 watts. It's all in how you measure wattage two 25 watt amps do not perform the same as a single 50 watt amp.
Sound Quality
:
8
I picked this amp up used as a practice amp and for small gigs so it doesn't need to be very loud, but it's plenty loud. Those who complained about not enough volume to play with a drummer should find a better drummer or wear ear plugs. The amp is a bit to bassy (dark) for my Les Paul and I set the Bass control low, 4-5 and the Mid about 6-7 and adjust the Treble to what sounds good. The amp or the speakers break up at about the 4 or 5 on the clean channel volume, okay for Blues but bad for Jazz and clean Rock. The distortion is good but a bit to chemical sounding rather than tube sounding for my taste. However; I can get a good Santana sound and I can almost nail Clapton's Cream guitar sound with some auto wah, by using the stereo Chorus, very cool.
Reliability
:
10
I'm the third owner of this amp, the first was a Church the second a home studio. I think it's been well taken care of, looks like it's brand new, I think it must be about 5 years old. No problems yet. Since it's solid state I think it will last many years.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No clue.
Overall Rating
:
8
As I said earlier I picked this up as a practice amp and possible small gig amp. In the past I've mainly used a '75 Twin Reverb as my standard gig amp but who wants to lug around a 70 pound vintage amp for a $100's a night? (I did back when I was in my 20's). For a while I used a Blues Jr which was a great little amp but it wouldn't quite cut it for clean Jazz turned up. That's why I bought this amp, hopping it will do a better job. I've been a profesional and semi-profesional musician all my life and played guitar for 48 years. To me this is just another amp, if it proves it's self useful I'll keep it, if not it will find a new home. So far I like it for it's size and wide range of tones.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 200.00
Submitted 01/09/2008
at 10:49pm
by fendercrate
Features
:
8
This is a 2008 update on mid-90s classic, primarily to emphasize one feature I don't think has been adequately mentioned by others. I've bought and sold a dozen amps since first getting one of these, then "upgrading" to the DSP model (disappointing), doing without one for several years and, fortunately, being able to re-buy the original model from a friend. In my youth, I thought the Princeton Chorus was a two-trick pony: Clean, or full-overdrive metal. Now I realize this classic amp also does a convincing impersonation of the Vox AC-30 (or AC-15) tube classic. The trick is to make full use of the LIMITER control, something I haven't seen on any other amps in this price range. Recapping, this amp has THREE distinct personalities. More...
Sound Quality
:
9
Crank the GAIN and the LIMITER each each to 8 or more, and the overdrive is harnessed, leaving a beautifully creamy tube tone with high compression and INFINITE SUSTAIN! Others have gushed over the chorus, and it is excellent. Too much gives it a dated 80s sound, but rolling the RATE and DEPTH to a minimum adds a subtle stereo fullness, without the gimmicky sound. A little reverb, and you're good to go.
Reliability
:
9
Tough stuff. And if I have a problem, my retailer can take care of it.
Customer Support
:
9
See above.
Overall Rating
:
10
Great sound in a small 2x10 speaker box. If I needed more power, I wouldn't hesitate to hunt down its bigger brother, the Fender Ultimate Chorus, with more wattage and 2 x 12s. The stereo effects loop makes it all the more versatile for me. No pedals. Something better - the Fender G-DEC. The little practice amp doesn't have much power, but I run a stereo cord from its headphone out to the Princeton Chorus and - voila -- the G-DEC becomes a powerful amp with all its top-notch models of Fender tweeds, blackface, Dynatouch, Vox, Marshalls and Mesa. Total cost for all this aural sweetness - $500 for the two amps. Me? I'm 57, been playing since "Louis Louis" was on the charts.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/31/2007
at 12:18pm
by seagullplayer77
Features
:
10
As far as features go, I don't have any complaints. The clean channel has your typical three tone controls (high, mid, and low), volume, and reverb depth. The chorus has both depth and rate controls, and Fender gives you quite a few controls for the drive channel, for all that's worth. There's plenty of stereo and mono outs and effects loop jacks on the amp, although I don't have a use for any of them. Since I just go straight through my pedals into the input, I've never messed around with any of the other connections.
So far, I've only used this amp in my bedroom, although it's plenty loud and I'm sure it would hold its own with drums and bass. I've never had to turn up the volume past 2, and it's still pretty loud even at that low setting.
Sound Quality
:
9
The sound quality on this amp is (for the most part, anyway), excellent. The clean channel sounds clean and crisp like it's supposed to and it's very easy to get a nice sound out of it. The reverb unit is a real spring reverb--not digital. I don't think I've ever gotten a bad sound out of the reverb. It's never overpowering or cheap-sounding, and I almost always play with the reverb turned up half way because it adds a nice little element to the sound.
The chorus sounds truly amazing. I've got a Boss CH-1 in my pedal chain, and while the amp's chorus isn't nearly as powerful or intense, I almost like it better than the pedal. The chorus on the amp has a nice, warm, analog sound to it, and I've never gotten a bad sound out of it either. Also, I love the little LED that blinks at the chorus rate. It makes it quite easy to dial in the chorus to a tempo that fits the song you're playing.
The only reason I gave it a 9 for sound quality is because the drive channel is pretty lackluster. I'll give Fender an A for effort because they give you plenty of control over your overdriven sound, but I've messed around with it and I've never found anything that sounds good. There are a few passable settings, but I've heard much better from cheaper amps. In any case, it doesn't really bother me THAT much because I have a Boss OS-2 Overdrive/Distortion in my effects chain that I use for overdrive (or distortion, depending on my mood).
Reliability
:
9
I've never gigged with it or used it live, but that's mainly because I don't really have any reason to. Most of the playing I do is at church, both at our youth group and on Sunday mornings. On Sunday mornings, I go acoustic-electric into the PA system, so the only time I ever use an amp is at youth group. I've got a nice Marshall AVT half stack that I use there, so I've never had any reason to take the amp and try it live. The only reason I got this amp was because I got it (essentially for free) with an almost new Gretsch G5120 and a matching Gretsch case. I paid $550 for the guitar, case, and amp.
I've had a cheap Fender amp (the Indonesian-made kind), and it's acted up on me before, but this amp is made in the USA, so I'd trust it a bit more than I'd trust the other one. I'll probably take it live eventually, and when I do, I probably won't have a back up. It seems like a pretty solid amp to me.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I've never had to deal with Fender before, so I can't really say anything about their customer service. They do keep good archives of old manuals, though. They don't manufacture this amp any more, but I didn't have any trouble finding a PDF manual for it on their Website.
Overall Rating
:
9
As far as guitars, I have an Ovation CU247, and Epiphone LP Standard, a Seagull S6+CW, and a Gretsch G5120. My pedal chain runs something like this:
Boss CS-3 > Boss PH-3 > Boss OS-2 > Boss EQ-20 > Boss CH-1 > Boss NS-2
I've been playing for 4 or 5 years now, and most of the stuff I play is Christian worship music. I don't play solos or riffs or anything like that--mostly just rhythm guitar, and occasionally I'll do some vocals as well.
If this amp got lost or stolen, I' don't necessarily know that I'd get a new one, simply because I don't really have much use for it. It sounds great and it's a sweet amp and I'd recommend it--don't get me wrong--it's just that I got it essentially for free with the Gretsch, and all I use it for is practicing in my bedroom. I'd definitely miss it if it disappeared, but I don't know if I would miss it enough to go seek out another one.
Overall a great amp. If you want something with great clean sounds and both great reverb and chorus effects, then I would definitely recommend checking one of these out.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/14/2007
at 10:09am
by Keef
Email: keefandtheweed at yahoo<dot>com
Features
:
10
I found this beauty in a pawn shop here by the Jersey shore. I play a Squier Standard Strat and use my Digitech effects pedal. This amp is great for my funk, jazz, and reggae, but the gain is powerful on this one...I plug in my ole Washburn shredder w/powersound and I'm in Linkin Park....I have the Mexico amp without the red lights..probally a 1996 - 98 model...try one they are all over the web.
Sound Quality
:
8
I have low budget axes, so the amp improves the sound..bright..the chorus is rich/deep..you have to do some tweekin..there's no dsp on this
Reliability
:
10
Customer Support
:
7
it's a Fender, so it's tough and the cosmetics are easy to maintain. any dealer can help you with this one
Overall Rating
:
10
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 11/27/2007
at 06:38pm
by Joe Randazzo
Email: wordsmiths_communications<at>msn dot com
Features
:
10
This is an update to my earlier review in March 2005. I now have two of these amps and use them in stereo. They are both black knob, made in USA amps. I found that although the Jensen P10R speakers had a sweet sound, they also had low volume. I replaced them with four (2 for each amp) Eminence Rajin Cajuns. The other features stay the same except for the reverb tank which I also switched out for an 18" unit. The features are perfect.
Sound Quality
:
10
Sound is everything for an amp. For a guitar sound, playability and probably looks to a lesser degree are important. For an amp, it's the sound. By switching out the speakers to the Rajun Cajuns, I picked up an incredible amount of headroom for the clean channel. It's now louder than my Deluxe was (sold it, didn't like it). The lows are so powerful that I have to tone them down. I also use a mixer and plug in a Martin acoustic 6 or 12 string J40. I use the Fishman, plus a mike in front of the soundhole. I also mike the voice into the mixer and plug all three into input #1 on the amp. I've got them on two amp stands bought at Musicians Friend. The combination is so successful I don't have to use a separate PA for voice in the small to mid-sized venues that I play. In larger spaces a PA for the voice is mandatory. The Princeton Chorus, in stereo, with the Rajun Cajuns can play in ANY venue. The distortion is also much better through these speakers, although you have to be careful to dial it properly. All solid state distortion can give you the hissies, if the gain and treble are up too high. Excellent blues distortion, but pedals are mandatory for serious metal fuzz. I have a great time with this amp. The stereo chorus effect is great because it alternates between both amps. I place one on either side of the bandstand, stage, or room and it really fills the space with lush sound
Reliability
:
10
Never had a problem with reliability. I love my vintage 1968 Fender Super Reverb, but I realy have to baby it. Tube life, biasing, capacitors that need replacing are a constant worry. The princetons are rock solid. The good thing about using two is that I always have a backup to drive both. If one quits entirely, there's still one to go.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I have NEVER used Fender for any kind of customer support. My local music store does the job.
Overall Rating
:
10
These amps are light. I'm not a gorilla and can carry one in each hand and walk up a flight of stairs. These amps sound WAY BETTER than any other Fender solid state I ever heard, and I prefer them to some of the tube re-issues. The instruments I use are ALL Strats. I have five of them including a 12 string. The combination is great. As I wrote earlier, it's also fine for acoustic instruments. The total price for both amps, and four speakers was still WAY less than the cheapest re-issue. Price paid reflects TOTAL PRICE for everything
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 569
Submitted 11/14/2007
at 12:48am
by whore belly
Features
:
9
This was originally purchased as a practice amp and it became my favorite amp. 2 channels reverb and chorus. more than I'll ever need I'm not an effects guy. But these features always sounded good. An effects loop with stereo outs I rarely ever used but it was nice to have. I've used this as a preamp into a twin reverb and to my recollection this was the greatest sound I'd ever heard. I often found myself practicing with the amp by itself then preamping a tube amp when giging. but my favorite feature was the weight, its alot of sound in a small light wieght package. Its plenty loud for small or medium sized gigs unless you want tinitus.
Sound Quality
:
9
The only solid state of that era that I could say was a 9. Tweaking it to any style is quick and easy. I play all styles and all types of gitters Les Pauls with humbuckers,I got a bluse hawk with P90s and an american dlx stat. all of them sounded good with this amp.I am amazed how that fender tube clean was so faithfully reproduced in this amp.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
100% satisfaction! I drug this amp ever where and played it hard. I never did anything but enjoyed its performance.
Customer Support
:
7
I've own several fender products and swear by them. I've had no problems with fender or fender dealers. they have all been great.
Overall Rating
:
6
Ive blown up countless marshalls and it didn't really bother me I'd just go buy another, or trade or steal one. I bought a new tube combo marshall and it went to the shop 3 times. I took it back to the dealer and trade it for the princeton and never looked back. I play exclusivly fender amps now. Unfortunatly marshall is the only product I can compare them to. Ive been playing 30 years and usually I'm almost always got the best sound in any room. Due more to experience than anthing else. I'm a true sound hound. We all know you can beat a tube amp. but the princeton chorus has enough good atributes to make it a contender in all aspects.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 425.00
Submitted 11/08/2007
at 07:54pm
by dreabfly
Features
:
8
Black knob version. Standard Fender speakers. Ditto on all the other features outlined in previous reviews. Not loaded with a lot of extras. Would love a master volume knob. Has two inputs, which can be very helpful for rehearsing if you need to plug someone in unexpectedly and for using the amp as a makeshift PA. I'll give it an 8 because of the missing master volume and no headphone jack.
Sound Quality
:
9
I bought this amp new in the late 90???s. As a gigging musician in LA, I wanted to help clarify some of the reviews that might confuse other users, particularly about 1) loudness and 2) the ever elusive ???overdrive??? channel.
My setup: 1972 Fender Mustang Competition or Parker Fly Deluxe>MXR MS-1 Super Comp>Menatone Red Snapper Overdrive>Boss Blues Drive>Boss CE-3 Chorus>Boss DD-6 Delay>Digitech Digiverb. In the past, I have also used a Digitech RP-20 on the front of all this for other effects.
This amp sounds awesome. And I agree with all the other users who cite the built-in chorus ??? it truly is beautiful ??? lush and full ??? better than any pedal you are going to be able to purchase and it is foot switchable, so who could ask for more. The clean channel is a joy to behold and only gets better with good effects ??? nice, warm, round, clear and super clean. As for loudness, however, my experience as a gigging player in most of Los Angeles??? mid to large-size clubs, is it is not loud enough to pull off a full band situation in anything larger than a ???small??? venue, especially if there is a bar nearby. When I bought this amp, my band was a rock/R&B project with a hard hitting drummer, keyboard player, bassist and two background vocalists. After playing several gigs, I became frustrated with the inability to hear myself onstage and went out and bought a 100W Marshall combo. I continued to use that amp as my primary gigging amp for the rest of my 10-year stint in the LA club scene. For those who say it???s plenty loud, I would say their use would have to be one of the following: playing at home (let???s face it ??? you can be on 3 and be too loud at home), church gigs, very small coffeehouse set ups, small low-key blues/jazz clubs with very good PAs, or any other small gig where the audience is more silent than not. If you are doing anything else including any kind of rock gig where you have a full band and a talking/drinking/mind-numbingly loud audience in front of you ??? forget it. Even miced up and running through the PA, you will likely not hear yourself onstage, which I found to be ultimately too frustrating to put up with. In my later gigging years, I used it as the primary amp for an electric violin setup in a theater situation, and it was absolutely perfect for that setting. I also used it as a makeshift PA in a small rehearsal space (for vocals, loop machines, and random other instruments) and it worked very well. It???s light-weight and very portable ??? fits nicely in any car and won???t kill your back to haul around.
As for the distortion ???channel,??? my .02 as a gigging rock player was that it was absolutely useless. Whatever warm squishiness you can get out of it in your bedroom will immediately go away as soon as you are in a cold hostile hard surfaced club. Coupled with the fact that it is also not very loud and very one dimensional (you can???t get a beefy distortion with a hint of edge on it like you need in a club), it just does not have enough versatility to meet the demands of playing live. The ???presence??? knob does not give you anywhere enough control over the sound that an EQ would, the mid-boost button provides nothing but muddiness, and the absence of a master volume control on the amp in general, makes switches between the two channels very difficult as you can???t adjust one without adjusting the other. If you are solo artist, it is possible you could get this channel to work for you live if you are not too demanding of your sound. It will never sound like tube distortion to me, but I guess you could call me ???picky??? in that department.
For recording, I think you can???t get better than this amp for the price. It is quiet, clean and provides a nice balanced tone for home recording which doesn???t require a lot of gain to sound great. For clean sounds with some delay or a nice reverb, it is absolutely the bomb. You may be able to coax something out of the distortio
Reliability
:
10
Excellent. I have gigged with it for many years with no noise, issues or fixes. The pots are starting to get scratchy, but that is just cleaning. I have gigged with it without a backup and not worried. Everything is solid.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never used them.
Overall Rating
:
10
This is a great small setting amp with a truly awesome clean and chorus sound. I???m going to do the Jensen P10R upgrade to the speakers just because I think if it can sound any better, it will just knock my socks off for home recording and my small gigs. This amp was one of the best investments I ever made, even needing to buy something more powerful after the fact. I expect that I will use it throughout my lifetime and get it worked on if it ever needs repairs. If it was stolen, I would absolutely try to find another one, even if it needed refurbishing.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/28/2007
at 10:44am
by AH
Email: oregoniv<at>myway dot com
Features
:
8
Late 1990's made in USA 2X10 version. Best chorus on earth. Worst distortion on earth. See comments.
Sound Quality
:
10
This is an update to my previous review a short time ago. I was unhappy that the amp sounded a bit dark for a Fender, so I started experimenting with different speakers and quite by accident, I came across a combination that is just phenomenal. If you want the amp to sound clearer and bloom like crazy, keep one of the original Fender ceramic speakers in it and replace the other with one Jensen P10R 8 ohm. I can tell you that the result is just incredible. If you put two P10Rs in it, the whole affect worsens and you get blackboard scratching treble. Try the combination-it works! For overdrive/distortion, I use an MXR GT-OD pedal. It's the most natural overdrive I have heard yet, at a decent price.
Reliability
:
9
Mine is a used amp and so far it has been reliable for months.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Not needed it.
Overall Rating
:
10
Once you swap the one speaker, it makes it sound like an expensive tube amp. It's a keeper!
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 250 USED
Submitted 07/04/2007
at 01:59pm
by Doc
Features
:
9
Made in USA but not the earlier red-knob model, which seems to be attracting vintage buyers on eBay for some reason. 25 watts per channel solid state stereo chorus amp. Other postings cover the features. Use it mainly for practice, but look forward to gigging with it in small rooms if anyone ever wants to hear me play.
Sound Quality
:
9
The reason I'm writing this review is that I swapped the speakers, replacing both standard Fender (Eminence-made) 10" with "The Copperhead" speakers, also by Eminence. This improved the amp's clarity, particularly the Telecaster (w/ Vintage Noiseless) but also on a humbucking guitar (old Ibanez Concert series solid body). I'm not too happy about the extreme clarity, though, when playing on my hollowbody jazz guitars. (You can't have everything, I guess.) I imagine for a rock sound you could try the Eminence "Ragin' Cajun," which would definitely give you more volume than "The Copperhead." (I've A/B'd them in other small SS amps and the volume difference is noticable.) I use the distortion channel sparingly (see other posts for how to do that with the gain, presence, and limiter knobs--very helpful), a DigiTech Bad Monkey, and Boss EQ pedal to boost the gain. The amp's footswitch and the two stomp boxes give me a nice variety of options, including a clean boost with the EQ. To echo what others have to say further down, there's no getting away from the fact that the PC sounds like a solid state amp, but a quality solid state amp. Gives you that glassy Fender clean that no other amp can seem to quite manage, and that's the draw for me. Stereo chorus is nice, particuarly when combined with some distortion, either the amp's or a pedal's.
Reliability
:
6
Had to get it re-soldered at a local shop. I bought it used and the previous owner probably traded it in because it was getting unreliable. Developed a loud hum for me. Amp was $250 + another $65 to get it fixed, but the owner of the shop said he'd fix it again if I had problems later on. Insurance? My reliability issue seems unique, though, as most others in this thread find it pretty reliable. I'm sure mine is too after the fix, but once burned ... I baby my gear anyway.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
This model has long been out of production and will only be available in the used market.
Overall Rating
:
9
Playing since the mid-60s and now practicing a variety of styles, concentrating on Jazz since I didn't have the patience when I was a teenager. Love the blues, though; never could stay away, growing up in Chicago. With a just bit of distortion the PC is real nice for blues work, particularly with the chorus engaged and a little distortion. (Suggestions further down the thread for how to twiddle the knobs.) The stereo chorus is so nice it may break you of using a pedal. Have tried hooking this up with a small SS 25-watt Fender + a delay pedal. Terrific fun. You could also use the stereo effects loop I guess. If you're a metal guy or playing large venues, you're probably not reading this. You'd be real disappointed in this amp's distortion and lack of volume anyway. For geezers like me it's a nice amp. Not too heavy in any sense of the word. ;-)
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/29/2007
at 06:41am
by Tom Porter
Features
:
10
I bought mine brand new. I went looking for an Ultimate Chorus and wound up with this instead because the overall sound of this little guy beat the crap out of the Ultimate Chorus. Go figure. Anyway, I needed an amp for low to medium output recording and some performance work so this is the one I chose. Looking back I have no regrets. This is feature laden including two 25 watt amps running in stereo with both mono and stereo effects loops that can be combined, and a nice stereo chorus effect, built in. For the venues I play in and for recording, the Fender Princeton Chorus has everything I need, including plenty of volume and a decent overdrive channel, too.
Sound Quality
:
10
The Princeton Chorus is capable of some very lush, sparkling Fender clean tones at low to medium volume levels using a Les Paul with PAF pickups and a Telecaster.
The overdrive channel is useful only for a slight overdrive. I use the overdrive at 1 or 2 with the mid-boost engaged to provide a nice boost for the clean channel. That's what it's good for-nothing else.
A lot of people want distortion or very heavy metal type sounds from "channel 2" but that's not what this amp is about. It has a single channel with a built in overdrive. It works fine for me, but I can understand why so many put down the overdrive. Seasoned players who appreciate a little "hair" on top of their clean / blues / jazz tones will appreciate the overdrive circuitry.
Most modern guys will have to look elsewhere, or use a pedal with the clean. I have used a Blue Tube pedal and I am satisfied with the boost that it gives the clean channel. Mostly I just use the amp's OD.
The stereo chorus makes the clean channel absolutely shine. It flat out swirls and gives the amp a much bigger sound. Reverb is pretty decent, too. Stock speakers sound excellent. I love the pure tone that this amp delivers with or without the chorus. The headphone jack is stereo and the sound is beautiful.
I'm using this with a Gibson Les Paul standard and a Fender Custom Telecaster with a humbucker at the neck. Both sound good with the Princeton.
Dead quiet amp. I play clean oldies rock n roll, classic rock, blues and a little hard rock.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Never had a problem. I mean ZERO problems. This is well built. Mine is the original issue of this amp with the ugly red knobs from that era of Fender. (I bought a set of black knobs on Ebay for 10 bucks that came on the Mexican models because I hated those red knobs!) The American made models just seem to have everything done right in my opinion.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Got a schematic from them with the amp. Also came with a manual that explains all the features and tips for getting the most out of the features. Never had to call them about anything so no opinion.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Over the years this has been a perfect match for the work I do, either recording or live shows. Some have said it's a really good rendition of a Twin Reverb sound at about 25% of the volume. I have owned two Twins over the years and the Princeton Chorus can achieve some of that Twin Reverb mojo but it's never going to take the place of the real thing. For a good all around medium volume amp this is hard to beat. Sounds good at low to medium volume and with headphones. It probably has the best stereo chorus of any amp. I would buy another one of these in a new york minute.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/28/2007
at 12:11am
by AH
Email: oregoniv at myway<dot>com
Features
:
9
I purchased this solid state amp, used, on ebay. Looks to be about 5-7 years old. The important thing for me that it was made in the USA, not Mexico, China, Korea or Viet Nam. The later models are built in Mexico. And, I was looking for a 2X10 like the discontinued Marshall JTM 30s-they sound pretty cool and look the best, but go for a lot of bucks on Ebay, so I thought this amp would be a good alternative. The JTMs are not built too well and apparently self destruct after a while from the inherent heat buildup from their tube-design. The Princeton Chorus has a clean channel, a distortion channel and a chorus channel; with footswitch and "Fender Specially Designed" speakers. It has jacks on the front to do a lot of stuff; personally, I can do without it all, just looking for good quality clean sound and basic amp in general. It has a lot of versatility and I use mine only at home, not gigging at this time.
Sound Quality
:
8
To my ears, with my Strat and Gibsons, the clean channel sounds very good but not in the same league as tube Fenders nor other more recent solid state Fenders (I've owned several Deluxe 90's and Stage 100's which are very Fendery but are very loud). The Princeton Chorus does not have that true Fender sparkle but does have a very good sound overall. Perhaps I am not used to the 2X10 setup but the more I use it, I do like it. I suspect that replacing the stock speakers would help this amp to go more in a Fender direction: I know others have recommended Jensen P10rs or Webers and I am considering those options, because I want to keep this amp. The thing I do like about this amp is that the volume comes up very slowly and is good for use at home without blowing the windows out. With the 2X10 configuration, it is a full sounding amp too. The distortion channel is really really really (trust me) bad, so I don't use it. The chorus channel, on the other hand, is spectacular and is really cool to use. I have owned several top notch chorus pedals, and somehow, this amp beats them all. The best way I can describe it is that the chorus on this amp is very open, airy and natural sounding. Fender should package this chorus sound in a pedal and they would sell a million of them! So the clean channel and chorus channel persuaded me that this amp is a keeper. I would love to hear speaker replacement reviews and recommendations from others who own this amp.
Reliability
:
8
So far, have used it without any problems for several months, at home. Seems gigable but I am not sure it would be loud enough with a band.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No need so far, for customer support.
Overall Rating
:
8
I have been playing over 25 years and I play classic rock, rock, country, southern blues, etc. I would replace this amp with the same thing if I had to, as I do like it a lot. The chorus channel is a riot, really nice. I wish it had less amount of jacks on the front panel and since the distortion channel is useless, they might as well not built it into it, but nevertheless, a good quality, fun to use USA made amp. Recommended.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/18/2007
at 02:53am
by Dan Burford
Email: dan<dot>burford at gmail<dot>com
Features
:
6
Mine is the later black knob variety. I've had it since about 1997, playing Strats and Teles doing everything from triphop/electronic to cowpunk altcountry dub. I didn't know per se I was going to be doing all that when I got the amp, but I had a hunch when I played it in the store that it would fit in with whatever I was going to be doing. If that makes any sense. And I was right.
Like:
- FX loop (though not switchable).
- The chorus is quite pretty.
Don't like:
- Reverb is not footswitchable.
- The channel switching is pointless ('overdrive' channel is useless).
Sound Quality
:
9
I don't know why they include an 'overdrive' channel on things like this. I guess it's a failsafe in case you spent your last dollar on this amp and won't be able to finish buying your rig, and you just have no other distortion source. If you wanted to play straight guitar->amp, you'd buy a tube amp.
Having said that, the clean sound is just beautiful. Full, deep lows, chimey highs, maybe a little rolled off in the sparkle area but that's all right with me. Mids are solid, maybe a little honky, but again, to me that's just how guitars should sound. I love it...ten years on and I can still plug in and hit an open clean chord and just grin for a while.
It takes very nicely to my pedals/racks/devices jungle. With a tube preamp tweaked right it really sounds like an old tube Fender breaking up. I've played Rhodes and analog synths through it with great results too.
Reliability
:
10
Over the past ten years it's been left in vans in bad weather for days on end, stored in leaky drafty garages, many a spider's made his home in the back. I've had it up in the mountains at music festivals in dust and rain, it flew to Hawaii, fell out the back of a VW Bus onto concrete, had beers spilled over it, been kicked over more times than I can remember. I have never given it the slightest care, not cleaned a jack nor even wiped off the grill.
It seems to really like this treatment, and has had no failures, no scratchy controls, and sounds as good as the day I bought it. I plan to be meaner to it in the future.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
See above. Fender tossed this bird out of the nest and expected it to fly; why would they need to be bothered with it now?
Overall Rating
:
9
Can you tell I love my amp? Look, I know it's a cheap solid state small-wattage piece of junk. It's not some Dumble vintage hotrod tonemeister. But I'm a gadget junky, I like sticking boxes together to make sounds, so I can get my reactive organic overdrive sounds with boxes. So for me an amp comes down to clean sound, and the clean sound of this amp is deep and chiming and full as I could ever want, even A-B'd next to those expensive amps.
I only took off a point due to the existence of the distortion channel. If it didn't have that they could have used the space in the unit to give me a parallel effects loop and switching for the reverb & loop.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 250 USED
Submitted 03/02/2007
at 10:42pm
by Mitch
Features
:
10
Check out the previous review. Dude caught all the features but I totally disagree with his rating of the overdrive channel. Read on...
Sound Quality
:
10
The previous reviewer talked about how good the clean sound is. I agree totally. It is beautiful with or without the killer stereo analog chorus. Thing is, I use the overdrive all the time and I think it sounds killer, too. Here's the thing on the Princeton Chorus. It is really a one channel amp. If you like the raw American guitar tone of groups from the sixties and seventies then you will really dig this overdrive sound. Limiters and active presence controls are perfect for taming gain but they are not tone controls.
Here's the deal. When you buy a cool pedal to use with an amp's clean channe you will usually mess with the amp's tone controls to get the most from the pedal, right? With the princeton chorus you have to do that, too. It's a clean channel amp so when you use the overdrive, you're going to have to mess with the clean channel tone controls. If you think you can use the presence and limiter to shape the tone of the overdrive then you'll be frustrated. Think of the amp as a one channel amp with tone control, and an overdrive. Think like this and you will get the coolest tones in both clean and overdrive.
I love the sound of this amp for its old time "Fender with Jensen speakers" sound. It matches up with that vibe. Good old American Fender tone. You'll never mistake the sound for a Marshall amp. I doesn't do that. If you dig the raw, American Fender tone then you want one of these.
Reverb is okay.
Chorus is super adjustable and beats hell out of digital chorus. Sounds nice with overdrive, too.
Gear I use: Fat Strat and Les Paul. Both have upgraded pickups.
Styles I play: Classic rock, surf-a-billy, hard rock, lite jazz. No metal.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
Great sounds from this little amp. Best 250 I ever spent on a Solid state amp.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 200 USED
Submitted 02/27/2007
at 10:44pm
by Bruce Noland
Features
:
10
I use the clean channel with a Boss ME 5 pedal. I never use the overdrive but there are two channels on this. The reverb is very nice and the amp has a terrific stereo chorus. Two effects loops that can be run in stereo or mono. Two 10" Fender speakers. Nice black tolex. Red knobs against a black panel. Mid boost on the overdrive channel. Active presence on the overdrive and a limiter to tame the gain on the overdrive channel. No master volume. Lots of options for crafting my tone.
Sound Quality
:
10
I love the way this amp takes to pedals. I love the way it sounds without pedals, too. The clean channel is stupidly lucious and catches the Fender traditional clean tone. It is one of the best sounding amps I have ever played through with my Les Paul or my Strat.
Now for the skinny on the overdrive. IT SUCKS TOMATO PASTE! I never use it and I don't care. This amp is perfect in the clean department and makes pedals sound great.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
This is the perfect mid-sized amp with tone that rivals good tube amps. I've been a player for forty years and I know good tone. As a clean amp it is extraordinary. Add that lucious stereo chorus and a nice overdrive pedal and you've got a serious ass kicking rig for smaller venues. It's just about perfect.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 250 USED
Submitted 02/06/2007
at 12:08pm
by val pruffen
Features
:
No Opinion
This is a review for an early 90s PC with the red channel knobs. It has 2 10" Fender speakers, two channels, spring reverb and a nice stereo chorus effect. It's lightweight and portable.
Sound Quality
:
10
A lot of these reviewers focus on how nice the clean channel is. It is very nice and very Deluxe Reverb-ish. But come on, the overdrive channel is where this amp shines. The controls on this channel are nothing like what you are used to on most dual channel amps. You have a gain knob and a limiter knob and a presence knob, PLUS a mid shift button and a volume control. The channel EQ is the same as the EQ for the clean channel-both channels share one EQ.
The OD channel can go from a light overdrive to a nice fat crunch and believe me, the sound is just incredible. It's an overdriven tube sound that I have never been able to duplicate on any other solid state amp. It's the interaction with the gain, presence and limiter that does it. I use the mid boost too, for a fuller, richer overdrive tone. I can't say enough about this channel's sound. It is pure tube tone with harmonics and dynamics. The sustain is incredible. Playing solos on this channel is a dream because the limiter effect makes for a fast attack when speed picking but it creates a nice harmonic bloom when holding a single note. Single notes bloom right into harmonic feedback EVERY TIME! I love it...it's so predictable that it's scary. I've never owned another amp that did this so well.
I never use any pedals with it because there is no need. If you want to use it for metal, you'll need a pedal for sure and it takes to pedals just fine.
If hard rock and blues is your thing then this is all you need whether you play single coil or humbucking type guitars. It's astonishingly versatile and has tone to die for. The stereo chorus is also superb. It's an all analog chorus so no digital hiss or artificial after-tones, just pure shimmer with adjustable depth and rate. Gawd...I love it!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
If you're looking for a sweet amp for jazz, blues or rock that is lightweight and versatile this is it. All you need is the amp and the channel switching pedal that comes with it. The switch turns the chorus on and off and switches the channels. This amp KILLS no matter how you look at it. GET ONE!!!!!!
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: euro 400
Submitted 02/04/2007
at 06:12pm
by princetonchorus
Features
:
8
Everything's already said in other reviews
Sound Quality
:
9
The clean channel is superb. Clear sound from 1 to 5, and it starts to distort above 5.
The drive channel is very dynamic, but needs a bit of learning on how to get the good sound. With low gain settings it gives a nice driven sound, turning it up can get some ugly fuzzy but there is where presence and limiter knobs make its magic.
Spring reverb is deep and quiet.
Chorus swithes speaker to true stero, producing a real wide sound, very effective with low depth and clean channel.
I usually play with a standard stratocaster plugged directly to the amp, mainly on the clean channel up above 5, so it gets a slightly cranked clean much like a fender tube amp. Drive channel with moderated gain to break into some solo.
Also play acoustic guitar with it, a great sound with clean channel, reverb and slight chorus.
Reliability
:
9
The amp has never broken down.
The only problem i'm having is noise on some knobs (after 7 years of heavy use), but this is just dust and i am too lazy to clean them up.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had any issue about this
Overall Rating
:
8
This is a great compact amp. Good sound for playing small gigs, and easy to carry.
I own a Fender Super Reverb tube amp, so i can faithfully compare the sound, and its as good as it gets with solid state for that price.
I still use this Princeton because the Super Reverb monster is not suitable for many situations.
If i need to replace this amp i would look for another fender solid state, probably for other model, but not because i dont like this one.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 150 USED
Submitted 11/06/2006
at 10:18pm
by Ken Shaw
Features
:
8
Mine is the older red knobbed PC. I bought it in 2000 used, of course. Lucky for me this little guy was treated with real respect and therefore it was delivered to me in near dead mint shape by its original owner. It was made in the early 1990s in Brea California, presumably close to those famous tar pits. Hmmm...
This is a single channel amp but it has an overdrive circuit built into the preamp section that adds a solid state gain circuit with a signal limiter, active presence control and a volume control. If this circuit were in a pedal, it would be an expensive, boutique type designed to push an amp into a crunchy overdrive. It is NOT brutal at all but can be set from near clean to mild overdrive to solid crunch to heavy Marshall-esque CRUNCH. It won't go past that however. So if you need a "modern" distortion tone don't waste your dough on this one. But for those who like that 70s style overdrive crunch made famous on a million records from the era (from Argent to Zepplin) you will really appreciate the wonderful, warm overdrive in this little amp.
As for the clean side of the PC; it is pure Fender-O! With a Strat, G&L Tele and a Les Paul I get that old school, signature Fender sound. It's got all the features a little 2 X 10 amp should have including reverb, analog chorus, mono and stereo effects loops, two fine sounding 10" Fender speakers and channel / chorus switching with a footswitch. Oh yeah...cool stereo headphone switch too. Mucho Groovy Amigos! And it's light as a feather too. It ain't terribly loud but for small to medium sized rooms it will do.
Sound Quality
:
10
This amp has real Fender character and chime going for it. It simply has "that Fender sound." If you have an appreciation for the Fender Princeton Reverb or the Fender Deluxe sound then you really will be knocked out by the clean channel. As mentioned this is not a terribly loud amp with 2 X 25 watts pushing a pair of 10" Eminence made Fender speakers. Nevetheless it has that lovely Fender tone, which when combined with a nice reverb sends forth an unmistakable Fender vibe.
The chorus is analog and therefore it is not terribly deep like the digital stuff. What it IS is warm and soft with a swirlly, stereo vibe. The volume is reduced a hair when it is activated but not terribly so. The reverb tank is a smallish one but the reverb is DEEP and pure Fender-O. Surf approved, cowabunga dude.
The Overdrive is great for soloing or crunchy rhythms. The active presence and signal limiter combined with the mid-boost all conspire to give the overdrive channel real versatility and great sustain. I'm talking bluesy, Stones grit to Zep crunch to Carlos smooth...it's very versatile! You can actually turn the gain down so low as to have a second clean channel if you want one at a certain loudness and the second at a higher volume level.
Overall this little guy has a strong Fender pedigree. As others have commented in this forum, it is arguably the best sounding Fender solid state amp ever produced. Sounds at least as good as my Roland BC 30, with more features.
Reliability
:
7
I use this as a creative tool for comping, rehearsing material and occasionally for recording, which it is well suited for. This is THE quintessential recording amp. It's also lightweight and small enough so it moves easily to rehearsal / recording spaces in the back seat of my car.
As for gigging with it I use it for coffee house venues, which it's perfect for. I play the coffee house gigs with two acoustic players and this amp is the best fit for an acoustic background of all my amps. Never had a serious problem with this amp.
Other than a slight glitch with channel switching from time to time she's never given me a problem. It's about average for a solid state amp in terms of reliability.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I started playing in 1965. I've owned, borrowed, rented too many amps to remember all of them but a few stand out...like this one. If it had the trem of my Silver faced Princeton Reverb it would be perfect. Compared to other Fender solid state amps like the Dyna Touch and Roc Pro or the new DSP lines (including the Princeton Chorus DSP), this amp beats the crap out of them. It uses the old TL 072 op amps throughout with a dynamic, surrounding RC network for each of them. From an engineering viewpoint the guys at Fender did a fine job in producing a wonderful sounding "pure Fender" sound machine. I love mine and wouldn't part with it.
Other gear I own:
Fender Princeton, Fender Super Reverb, Fender Bandmaster, Marshall JCM 800 & 900, Carvin Nomad, Roland BC 30, Fender Champ 25SE and a bunch of old school pedals-all analog.
Guitars are two 70s Strats, Les Paul standard, Les Paul custom, G & L ASAT, Heritage H 150 goldtop and a couple cheap Ibanez shred guitars. If you want a nice, inexpensive, medium powered stereo amp with character and vibe then you won't be disappointed with the PC chorus. No pedals needed with this amp. Just plug in and play away!
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: USD 250
Submitted 10/25/2006
at 01:33pm
by Chambeau
Features
:
9
This is a quintessential solid state amp, which means what you put in is what you will get out. It might have that extra "glassy shimmer" that any solid state amp has, but it represents the signal pretty well. It sounds much better than most non DSP SS amps out there.
The Bass Mid Treble controls give you great treatment of the sound and allow one to dial in a great "tonal foundation" that could be then refined with any EQ pedal.
The Overdrive channel can be manipulated by the Bass Mid Treble controls. I belive this is a great feature that is not always found on many solid state distortion channels.
There Limmiter and Presence controls work well in conjunction and will allow the user to dial in many different types of tube-style overdrive. Remember, this is an OVERDRIVE channel and not a Distortion channel, therefore this circuit is intended to emulate the sound of a tube amp breaking up from high voltage levels in the power stage. If you want insane distortion you are going to have figure out how to create that on your own.
The Reverb is pretty good. It has a little noise, but better than most.
The chorus is something interesting. Straight from the 80's.
Sound Quality
:
9
The clean channel is perfect for just about any lower volume application. I think that most musicians have become entirely obsessed with loudness. I personally believe that a more sonically rich and generally enjoyable sound can be created by just lowering the volume. . . .and that is for ANY kind of music. Some of the BEST performance groups (rock or otherwise) have their reputation because they have a grip on how to dial in a good sound without blowing out everyones eardrums.
THAT IS WHERE THIS AMP COMES IN!
Some of the best sounds from this amp are generated by using the Overdrive channel at lower gain settings in conjunction with the limiter. You can dial in some really tube-like sounds if you want. With the overdive section set mildly, turning the mid eq down with bass and treble up you can sound like a tweed.
Don't get me wrong, I love vintage amps and their sound, but for the most part the average person is going to be able to tell the difference. This amp does a better job than most. Remember the best musicians did the best they could with what they had. . .and THAT is how some of the best music was created . . HANDS DOWN.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
It seems reliable.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
This amp is great. It is the second solid state amp that I have owned for any long period of time.
One last thing, everyone is always talking about how "it ain't no tube amp!" and everything else, but in the same line of thinking no tube amp can ever sound like a solid state amp. And if you own a tube amp you are going to be presented with an entirely different set of sonic restrictions and the like. If you need an amp and you have an extra $275 I would consider one of these as an option.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: 300 (canadian) used
Submitted 04/14/2006
at 09:38pm
by Taylor Morgan
Email: tadium54<at>hotmail dot com
Features
:
8
first decent amp. 125 watts, bought it used and i think it was made in 1998 or so. my style is usually rock/metal with some blues and jazz feel thrown in and the amp is quite good for those styles. for more metal youd want to go with something like a marshall probably, but this works just fine. fender clean tones are amazing. has channel switching manually or via footswitch. wish it had a flanger, phaser or delay.a built in tuner- that would be nice, but its a very nice amp. use the amp at home and it has tons of power
Sound Quality
:
8
ibanez rx170 with duncans and a floyd 1. it suits my stule very well- loud when i need it, not so loud when i need it but note deffinition is still good. noisy a bit on the single coil mode and overdrive on, but thats not out of the norm, the chorus is nice, but i wish i could control the volume of it not by the main channel. ie go from a loud chours volume to a low clean chanel just by steping on the footswitch- ie 2 volumes. distortion isnt super brutal- its a built in effect- what do you expect, but it does the job for me. clean channel isnt too distorted that i can tell at high volumes
Reliability
:
9
i can depend on it. i would gig it without a back up, but that would be stupid- everything breaks at one point or another. never broken down on me tho
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with them- bought it used from a friend and i woudlnt really expect fender to waranty it- its used and probably past the waranty.
Overall Rating
:
8
playing for about 6 months or so. own the ibanez, this amp and a jackson js-20. if it were lost or stolen, id buy something from line 6 used. something that has way more efects in it. i like its size, its output, its ease of use. dont really hate too much- just wish it had a few more effects. didnt compare it to others- bought it from a friend used who wouldnt sell his line 6 ax2
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $250
Submitted 03/18/2006
at 01:46pm
by Joe Randazzo
Email: wordsmiths_communications<at>msn dot com
Features
:
10
Excellent features. This is a lightweight amp with plenty of character. In my opinion, it is the best solid state amp that Fender made. The headphone jack is great for silent practice (not disturbing others in the room) I bought a pair of Senheiser phones and with the chorus on, ooo my, very nice. The distortion is surprisingly good. You can play at LOW volumes and get a good crunch. To get the same crunch from a tube amp you have to play much louder. The stereo chorus is very fine. I was going to replace the reverb tank with an 18" unit, but the short tank sounds very good.
Sound Quality
:
10
I made an important mod to this amp. I replaced the stock speakers with the Jensen AlNiCo P10R. You have no idea how sweet it sounds. I have a Fender Deluxe with an extension cabinet. Both have a Jensen P12N speaker. The Princeton Chorus has just as good a low end as the Deluxe. I could not believe the richness of tone. Fender uses these speakers in the VibroKing, the Super Reverb, The Bassman, and the Vibrolux. Do yourself a favor, go to Vintagespeaker.com and get two of these P10Rs from Joe Scinta. Your Princeton Chorus will come alive. It's got great clean and the distortion is first rate for blues and some lighter metal. Dynamite sound. Plays much bigger than the 25 watts output.
Reliability
:
10
Mine is obviously a used amp, made in the United States. Absolutely rock solid.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I found mine on E-bay. I admit that you have to be careful when purchasing ANYTHING online. The first Princeton Chorus I got was supposed to be mint, but when it arrived it was a trashed piece of garbage. That caused me many headaches. The second amp was totally pristine. The seller is an honorable person. You can find these in excellent condition (it makes no difference whether it is made in Mexico or the USA, both are fine) for under 275.00 It's probably the best deal on a truly superior solid state amp. Please write me if you want any other info on the sound. Oh, by the way, the Jensen speakers bolt right in. The whole switch only took ten minutes.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $250.00
Submitted 01/29/2006
at 04:08pm
by Rich
Features
:
9
My amp was made in 1998. I find that it suits the needs of my sound that I try to create. I lean towards a Alex Lifeson (of Rush) sound especailly from "Moving Pictures". It is a two channel amp comprising of a clean and a distirtion channel. The clean is great especially when used with the chorus feature, and the beautiful reverb. The distortion channel is good as well. It's a nice sound that's not to harsh on the ears. The only feature that I wish it had was a delay, but a pedal can do that. I use this amp at home, I never have the chance to gig anymore. If I did this would be a great amp to use in a small setting. I find the sound is Rich, Deep and full.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use a 1978 Les Paul custom, with stock pickups. I find that they compliment each other well. The only problem I have is that my Les Paul can have a bit to much bass to it, so I need to turn the bass way down on the amp. Even with this I still get real good sounds out of this amp. I find that this amp is especaily good for the Blues. It works great with just a bit of distortion, as well as clean with lots of reverb and the chorus activated. I also use a Boss DS1 and a Boss CG-3 pedal and get some realy cool sounds.
Reliability
:
10
This thing is bullet proof!!!!!!!!!! I take care of my amp make sure it's free of dust and so far no problems. I have had Fender amps in the past and there name speaks for themselves.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I have never had a problem with this amp. I'm not aware of the warranty, but I bought this used so that really doesn't apply to me.
Overall Rating
:
10
For the 250 bucks I spent on this, it was worth every penny! The second I plugged into it I new that this amp would suit my needs. It may be small in size but it has lots of bite. I have never played this past 6 on the volume and i bet it could go even further without the sound being compromised.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $230.00 used
Submitted 01/28/2006
at 10:52am
by nick
Features
:
9
This amp is a 1995 or 1996 Fender Princeton Chorus amp bought used on ebay but in pristine condition. It is a two-channel, 50 watt solid-state amp with three band eq, gain, limiter, mid-boost, presence, and of chorus, a stereo chorus. Speaker configuration is two 10" "special design" speakers.
I had owned a Princeton Chorus before, and traded it for another amp, but just had to get another, as I believe this amp, and the Deluxe 85 are probably two of the best solid-state amps ever produced by Fender.
This amp was bought for home use and it is plenty loud.
Sound Quality
:
10
Okay, first of all, let's get something straight. I'm not going to be one of those idiots who comapres a solid-state amp to a tube amp. They are both two different animals. That's like comparing a strat to a les paul. They both might be guitars, but totally different kinds with different sounds and features. If you want a tube amp, go out and buy one.
I use this amp with two American Series Strats, a Dillion DR1500QT, and an SX GG1 STD Les Paul copy.
The clean channel is amazing to say the least, as is with all Fender amps. Couple it with the chorus, and you have one hell of a sound that in my opinion, you will have a hard time matching with any other amp.
The distortion channel is equally as good. I own some newer solid state amps (a Roland BC 60 310 and a Crate VFX212) and both are voiced too bright for single coils, and have little mid-range growl.
The Fender on the other hand, has great sustain out of the dirty channel, and if you add the mid-boost, it makes the bridge single coil growl, and takes out that "ice pick" bite found on my other amps. The limiter is a handy tool too to give the lead channel some compression. The sustain is trmendous, and this amp can give you either a bluesy overdrive, or full hard rock gain.
People who complain about these amps not giving enough gain are full of sh*t, or they bought the wrong amp for their musical tastes. Let's face it, there aren't too many metal players out there playing Fenders. Get real folks.
This is a great amp!!
Reliability
:
10
I've owned several Fenders over the years, and they have all been built like tanks. I've never had a problem with a Fender amp, even the tube amps I've owned.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to deal with them, a good sign.
Overall Rating
:
10
Fender amps are one the best built amps out there. This Princeton Chorus puts the new Fender DSP amps to shame. Built much better, better sounding, and also this one was made in the USA!
If I lost this one, I would buy another. I won't make the mistake of trading this amp like I did with my last Princeton. The versatility of sounds, as well as the quality are unsurpassed with some of the garbage that is being produced today.
A great amp overall, and one of Fender's best.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $270
Submitted 01/10/2006
at 03:39pm
by Ian Davis
Features
:
9
Mid 90's (I believe) Fender Princeton Chorus I ebayed from some guy who was probably afraid to plug in with the amp in its current state. When I bought it the thing was a death trap. Plug in, and even slightly move the cable near the jacks and you got this CRACKLE NOISE FROM HELL!!! After about an hour of swabbing out the inputs, though, the thing worked perfectly. Very useable EQ, gain, limiter, prescence, and chorus with depth and speed knobs. Mono and stereo effects loops, and a headphone input. Not to mention it's got a mid boost on the OD channel.
Sound Quality
:
10
Using it with a Gibson Les Paul Vintage Mahogany, this is NOT a bad amp. 120 solid-state watts of awesomeness. If you're willing to tweak this thing, you can get almost any sound you want. Let me give you examples of some of my settings.
Jazz Sound
Middle pickup setting
Treble-7.5
Mid-8.5
Bass-10
Roll of the tone knob to about 4, 5, or maybe 6
Blues Sound
Treble-8.5
Mid-7
Bass-9.5
Roll of some tone
Classic/Southern Rock Sound
Treble-8.5
Mid-7.5
Bass-10
Gain-10
Limiter-7.5 to 8
Prescence: +5
Thrash Metal Sound (this is a very generic setting but hell, it works great)
Treble-10
Mid-0
Bass-10
Gain-10 or close to it
Limiter-0
Prescence: +5
And I can get a huge slew of guitar sounds out of this amp that are highly useable. I don't find the gain knob sweep as useful as putting the gain at 10 and turning up the limiter to your preferred area. The limiter kind of compresses the distortion in your sound to give a cool sound, you can kind of tell the amp is holding back that mountain of distortion you've dialed in. Try dialing in the gain at 10 and the limiter at 10, and you've got a sound like a vintage Fender beginning to break up. The gain is kind of noisy at high settings, but what amp isn't? The clean channel doesn't break up, of course, it's a solid-state. The distortion needs a little kick in the arse to get a solid metal sound in my opinion, but that's why I personally use an MXR ZW-44 to do the job. High-quality sound, especially for a solid-state. I'm rating this based on how much I had to pay for it, and the fact that it's solid-state. I'm starting to wonder if I should even get a Twin Reverb for clean sounds though, because this thing can shimmer and sparkle with the best of them.
Reliability
:
10
Never gigged with it and haven't had problems yet. Had it for a year and a half now.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with Fender.
Overall Rating
:
10
Played 2 1/2 years, and I own a Gibson Les Paul Vintage Mahogany, MXR ZW-44 Overdrive, Boss BF-3 Flanger, Boss DD-6 Digital Delay, and soon to have a Boss NS-2 Noise Suppressor and Dunlop Crybaby Classic. If this were stolen, I'd probably suffice with my Epiphone Studio 10 practice amp, try and hold out as long as I could, and then...it's a Marshall JCM800 for me. I want to get one soon anyway, but only for distortion, overdrive sounds. I'd deal with the JCM800's clean sounds until I could either get one of these again or until I could get ahold of a Twin Reverb. Unsure as of now. I play thrash metal and classic rock and this amp does almost anything I need it to. I just want the tube warmth and the Marshall overdrive sound. It does distortion well, it just isn't the KIND of distortion I want. It can probably do alternative/grunge distortion well, it's what it sounds like to me. Wish it had? Tubes, a Marshall pre-amp in place of this one's overdrive pre-amp, and a speaker out. That and it just doesn't get as warm as I need my rock sounds to get. Overall, a fantastic value considering what you pay for it.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $330
Submitted 12/05/2005
at 01:35pm
by egg
Features
:
8
clean chanel, overdrive channel chorus reverb.
Sound Quality
:
9
For the money, this amp is amazing. The clean is so clean that you can compare to some of the best cleanest tube and solid state amps i have heard. The overdrive isnt bad, but its not for metal heads. but is great for me becuase i can use light overdrive and get a good srv tone and a dynamic bluesy clapton tone.
Reliability
:
10
there is absolutely nothing wrong with this amp. i got it used and i predict it to be still putting out great tones for years to come.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never needed to call due the liabiltiy of this amp
Overall Rating
:
9
i have been playin for about 3 years i play a mexican strat and use a ts808 for my overddrive in the clean channel. I think this amp competes with the deluxe reverbs clean tone.. infact if you awant a good clean amp you cant go wrong with a fender maost are pretty ausome.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: 250 (cdn)
Submitted 11/05/2005
at 09:50am
by Beard
Features
:
9
2 x 25W (stereo, not a total of 50W), clean and dirty channels, 2 inputs, 2 10" eminence speakers, chourus and two loop channels.
Sound Quality
:
8
I picked this up for a practic amp, it was used and on sale. Saw it one night then came home to read the reviews and bought it the next day. I play a Deluxe Reverb and wanted a solid state amp that would be somewhat close to the DR and still keep up with our guitar player's 40W (in rehersal) Deluxe Tweed. The DR has better tone (tubes really do make a difference!!!!!), but this one comes as close as it gets for a non-cyber solid state. It seems that the more I tweak and play it, the better it sounds. I've never played a show with it, but it backs up the DR in case of tube problems (which I haven't had yet). Volume wise, it is about a half notch quieter than the DR (22W) and definitely quieter that the Tweed. I play a Norman accoustic, Fender Thinline Mandolin, American Deluxe Tele and Jaguar HH in a roots-rock/ honky-tonk/electric bluegrass/cow-punk band. I use the clean channel with Boss ME-50 pedel for distortion. This amp sounds good with all of the instruments. Personally, I don't like the stock distortion so the Boss does the job.
Reliability
:
10
Solid state; solid.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed yet.
Overall Rating
:
10
While it doesn't match the tone of the all tube DR ($1200 cdn), it's perfect for what I need it for. Wouldn't give it up now! I haven't played through every amp out there but this one is the best solid state that I have played through. If I did loose it I would want another. If you are looking for a solid state with that classic clean Fender sound, this one is hard to beat, especially for the price.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: 220 (EUR) used
Submitted 10/30/2005
at 05:23am
by Woody The Wild
Email: wolfgang dot beuer<at>freenet dot de
Features
:
8
Mine should be made in 1996 - it has the BF-cosmetics already, but is still made in USA.
I bought it used in 2003, but I had one already back in 1992 (at that time, a new one - still with Redknob-cosmetics) that I traded in for a VOX AC30 in 1994.
I bought this one as a cheap backup for my Concert Reverb.
You all know the features (or you can read it below on this page), so I just list the misses, that made up my rating:
For a solid state amp, there is no benefit of a non-MV-layout, so why is there no overall MV, to be able to quickly adjust volume for both channels together?
And hows about a switchable reverb and FX-loop?
On the other hand - we have chorus and an additional stereo FX-loop.
Sound Quality
:
6
I mainly play a 2001 JB Strat. My main style of music is Blues and my sonic heaven is Clapton and SRV. The amp suits this style and target sounds quite good!
The clean channel has really a nice warm tube-like sound and enough sparkle and depth to compete with a Concert Reverb or Super Reverb. Of course you do not get that wonderful harmonics and feel of these on higher volumes, but if you compare it at low levels, the Princeton Chorus might even be the better choice - it is just a matter of how loud you can/may turn up.
The overdrive is not a totally individual channel, but more like an effect, let's call it a built-in stomp box. But a very versatile one!
It is a very good idea to include a compressor into the overdrive circuit - that helps getting closer to the feel of a cranked up tube amp. And the mid boost just perfectly switches between SRV (off) and Clapton (on) - nice! However, the Presence control seems not sufficient to adapt the OD-sound to a more sparkle kind of clean set-up. Means, with the Gain at only a little bit higher settings (let's say 3 or 4), you have the choice between some high frequency hiss or a dull sound with no highs at all. So I use the overdrive only for very slight od and other than that prefer a Tubescreamer.
The amount of gain available should be enough for anyone (only a matter of if you like the sound .....)
The chorus is nice - no more (I prefer my Ibanez CSL).
The reverb is fine - not as good as a tube driven reverb, but better than e.g. the reverb of the Blues and Hot Rod series.
So what do we have here altogether? Good clean sound, versatile overdrive with some good sounds but also many not so good sounds (that was the reason, I sold the amp the first time), good reverb and a chorus ..... I want to do a rating independently of the price, so it is only a 6
Reliability
:
10
Never had any problem
Customer Support
:
5
Bad local support in Europe, but very good HP
Overall Rating
:
8
Playing for a long time now .....
If the amp was lost or stolen, I probably would look also for other amps of comparable price.
I rated the sound only at 6, but I have to add that it is still good value for the money!
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $192 used
Submitted 09/29/2005
at 10:34am
by Ron
Features
:
9
Late 1999 made in USA - Princetion Chorus.
Features listed in many review below, won't waste time.
Wish it has speaker outs.
Sound Quality
:
9
Great sound with my MIA Tele, much better than my 57 AV Strat.
Quite suprised how good is sounds (at least to me).
I usually play Marshall tube combos. I purchased this amp for two reasons 1. Heard good things about them 2. Got a great deal
Reliability
:
6
This is a used unit that cosmetically is in mint condition.
My only complaint is the reverb unit is noisy and emits a "burp" at high volumes or when you bump the amp. I am not sure if this it typical of this model.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Purhcased used, so customer support does not qualify
Overall Rating
:
8
I won this on the 'Bay for a great price. Seller has good feedback, so I took a chance. with the exception of the noisy reverb tank, this amp looks new and sounds fantastic for a solid state amp.
Most SS Fender amps sound like kaka. This one (perhaps because it was still made in US) is a wonderful exception and a pleasant suprise.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 08/25/2005
at 10:31pm
by FENDER MAN
Email: blkburdette at aol<dot>com
Features
:
9
Model made around 1998, With Black Knobs. Great compact size amp or playing small gigs or practicing. Clean and Distorted channel, spring reverb and lush chorus, headphone jack. I sort of wish it had a mellow tube sound. I use the heavier distortion, (gain high, limiter low, presence high), I also love it clean, it rings great tones out in your ears, with the reverb and especially the chorus. It has power for me, since I just practice with it mostly, I only used it once it a group setting (50 people approx) plenty of power. I think it sounds better clean, with a band. But for practicing a home and playing around then the drie channel is fun.
Sound Quality
:
9
I primarily play with a 1996 Fender American Standard Stratocaster (my baby). Which is a great guitar. I can get that Billy Corgan sound almost exactly. I can get Clapton's woman tone pretty much with my neck pickup. It is not noisy on the clear channel, it is surprisingly clean. It chimes, it rings, it is great clean, with the chorus. I intended to buy a Marshall when I went to the music store (about 5 yrs ago), but after trying several amps. This one won hands down, with price not even the factor. The regular distortion is cool, but your pedals are cool too. I like the amps drive, with a TS-9 Tube Screamer. I also have a Boss MT-2 Metal Zone which is fun over the clean channel (I don't play that type of music anymore though). But it will really distort like that. I think it is good either for clarity/clean channel or for heavy distortion. I think for mild distortion you need a tube amp or some other type pedal. For the $$$ it is well worth every penny spent.
Reliability
:
10
It is very dependable, if I had to do a small gig with it, I would rely on it. No backups needed, it has never failed me in that respect. The only problem I had was the foot switch went out on me, after regular abuse. I easily found a new one on ebay.
Customer Support
:
10
I think the warranty was like 5 yrs. But I never had any problems with it. Never had to deal with Fender, they are great company.
Overall Rating
:
9
I have been playing about 16 years. I own a 96 Fender Amer. Std. Stratocaster. I own a Fender Highway One Telecaster (just got it). I have a Gibson L-4A Acoustic Guitar. If it were lost or stolen I would try something else, just cause I like to experiment. I may get a VOX AC30 or Fender Twin Reverb, those are way expensive, but maybe someday when I want something permanent. For the money this is great, for home, when you do not need to get REALLY loud. I have bothered the neighbors a few times though.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $300.00
Submitted 08/16/2005
at 02:47pm
by The Blues King
Features
:
7
Pretty Basic features compared to newer solid states on the market. Comes with clean and overdrive, gain, limiter, prescence, one eq setting for both channels, reverb, and chorus. Also headphone jack (very useful), footswitch, and effects loops, which I don't use. I think made in 1999, use this amp for gigging in smaller venues and at home for practicing. I play mainly classic rock and blues and use this with a standard strat and a Gibson ES 335.
Sound Quality
:
10
If you put this next to a Deluxe Reverb, shut your eyes, you can't tell the difference. Just a lot less hassel and headache to deal with for a fraction of the price. The clean is as good as it gets, as well as any tube. The drive channel is useable, and go between a boss blues driver and the on board overdrive. Other than heavy metal, probably all you should ever need. Sounds great with the strat, and truly unbelieveable with the ES. More power than you think. I played at a bar earlier, about 250 or so people, and had it at 6 on the clean, and 5 on the drive, plenty of power, and didn't need to mike it. The bass can get overpowering at times, so it advisable depending on playing conditions to turn this down. Since there is only one EQ setting, I typically play at 7-8(makes a huge differnce)on the treble, about 3-4 on the mid, and 4 on the bass. When I play clean, I like to turn the bass to almost 7, which gives it a deeper sound. I set the gain at 7, sometimed I go to 8, the limiter at 2, and prescence at +3. If I use the chorus, and when I do I use it with the drive and no reverb, I set at 3 on the rate, and 8 on the depth. This gives it sort of thicker sound and also takes out a bit of the ss edge. For the money, the sound is super.
Reliability
:
10
Mine runs like a fine and well tuned machine. Never had a problem any play this thing all the time.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to call them
Overall Rating
:
10
I also own a Twin, and did own several Marshalls, and Mesa's. The Twin is great, but heavy, a lot work, and expensive. The Marshalls are great too, just they are even heavier and more costly. The Mesa's, just too damm much money for so much work, not worth the aggrevation. This baby, for the price and convenience sounds just about as good as any tube and a lot less time and money. Unless you are either a metalhead or blockhead with your brain up your behind, this is one of the best buys out there,,,if you can find one. I know Eric Clapton has used this on recording for his last couple of CDS, and several other artist as well, so if good enough for them, good enough for me. Try one out, close your eyes and open your head, you'll see what I am talking about. Have been playing since the days of Beatles and Stones, so I think I know a thing or two about music and guitar amplication.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $199.00 used
Submitted 07/24/2005
at 02:55pm
by Circio
Features
:
10
Late 1990's. 2 channel switching with spring reverb and chorus
Headphone jack and stereo line out
Two 10" speakers
Sound Quality
:
10
Classic Fender sounds especially with a Strat style guitar.
The chorus is beautiful and the distortion channel is quite good with a mid boost switch,limiter control, and presence control.
Reliability
:
10
Mine is in mint condition and I use for recording - so it will probably outlast me.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Doesn't matter, it's out of warranty.
Overall Rating
:
10
These amps did sell for around $400 brand new, so a used one in good condition for under $200 is a bargin!!! Outstanding amp for recording. Good for gigging in soft/jazz like bands except loud heavy metal and rock. I got this amp for recording. Although it is solid state, it still has those sweet tones. The chorus is great and the distortion channel is one of the best I've hard on an older Fender. I prefer a good sounding amp with reverb, channel switching, and NO special effects. The spring reverb on this beauty is classsic Fender - it can go very deep.
If you can get one of these in good shape - go for it.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 05/09/2005
at 03:06pm
by Chris
Email: cvor at verizon<dot>net
Features
:
5
I had the Princeton Chorus for 4 years or so. I sold it a couple years ago but thought I'd contribute a review. The features aren't bad: 2 switchable channels, reverb, chorus, footswitch, effects loop (series loop I believe). The reverb cannot be accessed by the footswitch and the poweramp and preamp are solidstate. The is no parallel effects loop that I can recall, but that's not a biggie. The biggest problem feature wise is that it is simply not loud enough. It did not have the ability to cut thru when playing with a drummer. I had to turn the volume all the way up to just faintly hear myself. The amp would feedback a great deal because of this. I play hard rock, so this amp is not suitable in a band situation.
Sound Quality
:
3
When I was using the Princeton Chorus, I was using an Ernie Ball EVH guitar. The clean channel sounds decent, more so with the chorus effect. The clean channel breaks up at higher volumes though. The distortion channel is thin sounding. Very weak sounding in my opinion, but I play hard rock, so that's just my opinion. This amp in NO WAY sounds like a tube amp---I've had Mesa's, played Marshalls, Fender Tube amps,etc. I have a Diezel VH4 head, but that would not be a fare comparison I suppose. The Princeton Chorus is strictly a practice amp (playing in your room, etc). This amp is not suitable in a bad setting unless you play very mellow music (I mean MELLOW!!!). I don't like solid state amps after owning a Mesa Mark IV, Road King, and the Diezel VH4(the best amp I have ever heard in my life). Solid state amps do not compare to tube amps. The Princeton Chorus does not really fare well in comparison to other solid state amps. The Line6 amps are way better and so is the Peavy XXX, just to name a couple.
Reliability
:
10
Never had a problem with the amp or footswitch. Pretty solid. After a few years of playing, I was able to get a little cash for it. Solid state amps are usually less prone to problems.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to deal with them.
Overall Rating
:
3
I've played for 15 years, been in a few bands, one that played regularly in bars. I'm a gear junkie. Aside from what I mentioned, I have a PRS Custom 22, Ibanez MM1, Ibanez Acoustic, TC Electronic G-Force, TC Electronic D-Two Delay, BBE Sonic Maximizer, Dunlop Wah with Roger Mayer upgrade, Mesa Boogie cabinets, Xotic Robotalk pedal, and Prophecysound Infinitphase.
I've tried alot of gear. Trust me when I say the Princeton is a practice amp. As far as distortion, for most styles of music you would need a pedal when using this amp. I guess this amp is good for beginners, but if you are serious about playing and have a few hundred + dollars, there are many amps that are better.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $450.00
Submitted 03/24/2005
at 06:42am
by Bluesbird
Features
:
10
Amp was purchased new in 1998. Dual channel (clean and overdrive) 50 watt amplifier. Vol, treb, mid, ad bass (clean channel, reverb (shared on both), gain, limiter, presence, vol (on overdrive channel), with rate and depth (for stereo chorus), footswitch jack with two button footswitch (for switching to overdrive mode and turning chours on/off, and mono and stereo effects loops, and headphone jack. Wish footswitch include button to turn reverb on/off. Have used all features at one time or another. Love this amp, play mostly classic rock, blues, country and some jazz in personal and at family gatherings and jamming with friends. Plenty loud when needed. It is solid state but you can come close to that "tube sound" with right combinations of settings without the worry of tubes. Solid and reliable with great tones at low and high volumes.
Sound Quality
:
10
Using '77 Fender Standard Strat w/single coils and a 2000 Guild Bluesbird with Seymour Duncan SH-1 humbuckers. Play mostly classic rock, blues, country and some jazz. Amp covers all very well. Has that great clean sound that Fender is famous for. Stereo chorus is fantastic. Not into heavy metal. Like hearing the sounds of my Bluesbird and Strat and not a lot of hiss and fuzz. Get good tones at low and high volumes and am able to dial in the sounds I'm looking for. Not a tube amp, but it can come pretty close to getting that tube sound without the added costs and hassle of worrying about replacing tubes.
Reliability
:
10
Very dependable amp. Only problem was a slight rattle whidh was corrected. Has never broken down and would not worry about needing a backup amp.
Customer Support
:
8
Only problem with amp was slightly rattle. Repair was under warranty but took three weeks to correct through local authorized service technician.
Overall Rating
:
10
Have been a non professional player for 38 yrs jamming with friends and performing at family gatherings. If stolen or lost I would buy another. This is an excellent amp, Fender should never have discontinued. Compared with Marshalls and Peavey the clean channel is far superior and the chorus is fantastic. Not a heavy distortion player. Music is meant to be heard not covered by distortion.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $145.00
Submitted 03/11/2005
at 02:30pm
by Eric Benjamin Gordon
Email: qbfan2002 at yahoo<dot>com
Features
:
10
This was my first guitar amp. Got it in July, '95. It's pretty versatile for what it set me back. It also has enough ingrediants to interatively teach the beginning electric guitarist the basics of amplification. Stereo chorus, distortion channel, channel select, two imputs, distortion limiter, 3-band parametric EQ, footswitch imput, headphone jack and stereo effects loop. It's a solid-state system, but it still compared well with the cheaper Marshell rigs. I used it most often for the first seven years I was an electric guitarist. Didn't make it onto many recordings, but it served its purpose. It could probably have used a power conditioner for cutting out the 60-cycle hum on channel 2.
Sound Quality
:
8
I used it first with a Mexican Standard Strat with single-coil pick-ups, an electrified classical guitar, B C Rich guitar with DiMarzio humbuckers of some kind, Epiphone Les Paul w/ Gibson humbuckers and various steel-string acoustic/electrics. It suited my style as a beginning classic rock guitarist, especially as it seemed to sound like the Tom Scholz Rockman, when amplifying humbuckers. The distortion is highly infectious and can sound quite varied, when you alter the gain and presence controls, or the EQ settings. You have to really crank the clean channel to overdrive it. The afforementioned 60-cycle hum happens most often with the distortion channel when the guitar is used with single-coil pick-ups.
Reliability
:
8
One reason that I stopped using it was that the main imput jack started giving me trouble. In truth, that was the only ever hassle with this little beastie.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never sought customer support. Haven't dealt with Fender at any time. Mostly dealt with instrument retailers.
Overall Rating
:
8
I decided to officially change amps in 2002, but this one was very good to me from 1995 to then. Even when it gave me trouble, it was still a great piece of machinery. It also has a vintage look, with the big knobs, dual speaker cones and vinyl outer covering.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 02/15/2005
at 10:11am
by Gabe
Features
:
10
This is a USA PR 82 with black knobs. Two channel, foot-switchable clean and overdrive. I bought it new in '98. Very versatile sounds. I can get everything I need tone-wise from this amp. The chorus effect in stereo is fantastic in a smaller room. Makes it sound like your guitar is coming out all over the place. I never really use the effects loops much, but I imagine for recording or with a pro rack setup they would be very useful. The headphone jack is very useful when learning new stuff late at night or if you don't t want other people hearing you screw up your parts.
Sound Quality
:
10
For the price, hard to beat the sounds. I usually use this with a dual humbucker Yamaha with the stock Yammy p'up in the neck and a "Duncan Design" Buckshot in the bridge. It's generally a bright sounding amp - the Fender trademark - but you can darken it with the controls. The overdrive is excellent. The overdrive isn'for screaming rage-metal, but is great at more subdued settings. Works great with my Digitech RP100 and most other pedals I've used with it (didn't like my brother's Boss DS-1 with it). Very quiet and clean, but when you switch on the chorus you hear an increase in noise. Not too bad, though.
Reliability
:
10
Nothing has broken.
Customer Support
:
10
Warranty was five years, but I never needed it. This warranty is great because you get to transfer it if you sell your amp. Helps the resale value.
Overall Rating
:
10
Been playing seriously since '96. There's really not much out there that this can be compared to. I guess the Roland Jazz Chorus. My jazz teacher has one and we think this amp actually sounds better than his (his can get louder, though). This amp has served me very well. The only thing I'd change would be to have totally separate tone controls for the two channels. And if it could be a little bit lighter in weight, that would be nice. A friend is thinking about making a solid pine cabinet for me, which we estimate will reduce the weight to around 30 lbs. Nice to be able to carry everything in one trip.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: 220 (#(UK)) used
Submitted 12/27/2004
at 07:28am
by Chris
Email: cdchantler at yahoo<dot>co<dot>uk
Features
:
8
This is a 99 model USA Fender princeton chorus, which i bought in 2000 for #220(UK). As mentioned before it has 2 x 10" speakers, built in stereo chorus, clean and overdrive channel.
I play a gibson LP std through this amp and it has mainly been used as a practice amp, for which it is brilliant as it gives a good clean sound at low volume, although i think the distortion only really starts getting any substance above vol 2, at bedroom levels, it sounds weak.
I have been playing for about 7 years and have just joined a covers band. I was going to sell this amp and get a marshall TSL as i had certain gripes about the amp, namely:
Only a single lead channel (TSL had two overdrive channels with independant EQs)
Single EQ for both channels
Not loud enough for solos i feel.
However, i have really come to like this amp for playing in the band, using the in built distortion channel. The other band members really like its sound as well (really good for a solid state and the price paid)
I got around the problem of no "lead" channel by turning my FX pedal (BOSS GT3) output to about 8 (standard setting is 5, so 8 results in the signal being amplified through the pedal, driving the amp much more than it usually would be), i then programmed a "rhythm" patch with master volume 25 (out of 100, so the signal is attenuated overall through the pedal), and a "lead" patch with master volume 100.
I set the amp at about volume 5 and when i do a solo, the signal's amplified overall by the FX pedal. Its pretty loud after that and seems to cut it for solos. This works fine for distorted work, although the amp doesn't like the "lead" setting at all on the clean channel, its loud but it tends to distort when played hard. I use pedal volume of 50 for clean stuff which
Sound Quality
:
8
I usually play this amp with tre 7-8 mid 3-4 bass 7-8, rev 5, gain 5, limit 3, pres 2-3. For a classic sort of sound, pretty gritty from the bridge pickup of the LP. Works pretty well with the setup above for small gigs.
I don't tend to use the chorus in gigs, but when i playing clean stuff at home, its good to get the reverb and chorus up, very good quality sound.
I do love the clean channel on this amp, once you get above about vol 2, the neck pickup on the LP sounds fantastic, I do feel the amp sounds a bit too trebly when i play the clean bits on "sweet home alabama" - i'd really like a marshall for that number.
Reliability
:
10
Bought second hand in 2000 - one year old, #220 (belive they're #450 new !) - no problems EVER, i've lugged it around countless times. I do feel its only a matter of time before i snap off a control knob, but otherwise, its pretty robust
I have gigged it without a backup, there doesn't seem to be a great deal to go wrong !
Customer Support
:
9
No dealings with fender ever, apart from i sent them an email with the serial number when i bought it for manufacturing dates which they proptly replied to
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
For the money/weight its great. It does sound good and i feel its a good amp for small gigs and practice. I have mentioned the amp's limitations, some of which you can get round with an fx pedal.
May still buy that marshall, but i wouldn't sell this beauty !
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $275 used
Submitted 10/22/2004
at 03:27pm
by Tony
Features
:
10
I think it's a '94 or '95. after 100+ reviews, I think we're all a little tired of the specs!
I'm gonna give it a 10 tho, 'cause I can get sounds aplenty outta this thing!
Sound Quality
:
9
I play a '91 Strat Plus through this unit. It sounds wonderful. I run the Strat-->Tube Screamer Turbo-->Dunlop Wah-->Princeton. All this
through the clean channel. I never use the crunch channel. I think this amps' internal overdrive is useless for my style. I'm playing mostly blues and classic rock style stuff and the tube screamer gives me a far warmer sound! I just love the clean channel tho! One thig to try here is the effect loop, Occasionally I'll put the tube screamer in there and what I think it does is mix the dry signal with the wet signal, this really cuts down on the distortion part of the pedal but definitely boosts it's ability to pull of great Stevie Ray sounds. Give it a try, if you're at all into blues you'll likely dig this set-up!
Reliability
:
10
Very reliable, I've had it for years and never done anything besides run a damp cloth over it to clean it occasionally.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Who knows, I'll probably never know either! You can pretty much use
Fender equipment as a hammer and it still works perfectly.
Overall Rating
:
10
Playing for over 20 years, I've told you 'bout my electric rig, my acoustic gear is Takamine! They are so nice and bright with killer action and they sound great thorugh this amp too! I have gotten over the fact that this is a solid state amp. I'm always embarrassed to admit it to others cause it's just not cool, but when I play through it, I forget all about the shit, It's a very good sounding amp! So to hell with being cool, I'm just happy it sounds good! What I like about it is that it is a REAL amp, not some digital modeling amp.
This is the real deal, and when I play through it, I know it's how I sound, not some engineers' version of how he thinks I should sound! So I'm giving this baby a 10! for the money, there's no beating this thing, You can find them on ebay all day for under $300! I would recommend picking one up for sure, If anything were to ever happen to this I'd get another one before the end o the day! Thank you and goodnight!
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $424
Submitted 10/17/2004
at 07:23pm
by Neal
Email: nrglobal at cinci<dot>rr<dot>com
Features
:
7
2 ten inch speakers, 51 watts, stereo, 2 drives, clean, and dirty. Some pretty descent distortion shaping controls, limiter and presence.
Sound Quality
:
10
Excellent clean, about as good as it gets. Distortion pretty good too. If using for blues and rock, distortion is perfect,(which is what I bought it for), for metal, best off with another amp. Power, well, more than enough, unless you plan on playing arenas. My best setting, for a MIM Strat w/ Vintage Noiseless pick-ups are, bass and treb at 8, mid between 3 and 4. Gain at 7, limiter at 2, presencen at 3. One other thing, I did replace the reverb tank, with a longer(still 3 spring), but really added a deeper tone and sound. That is why I am giving this baby a ten.
Reliability
:
10
Never had a problem, Had it for five years.
Customer Support
:
10
Great people, full of tons of tips and knowledge.
Overall Rating
:
9
I have been playing for over 20 years, and for a solid state amp, tghis is about as good as it gets. I think this is by far the number one selling s/s amp for fender, and easily to see why, just not sure why this was discontinued? I if this were lost or stolen, since this is discontinued, I would replace with a deluxe reverb, as has a similar deep sound. Have compared to other models, and for the ease and price, this has the sound, the power, cool headphone jack, and can create a lot of different sounds by playing with all the controls. Compared to the newer models and all the DSP effects, this still sounds better, and if you can get a used one for under $300, go for it and pass on the newer models.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $100 used
Submitted 10/03/2004
at 01:28pm
by kurt sovey
Features
:
9
this amp was made in the mid to late 80's i believe, its got 2 channels, a clean and overdrive, and built in reverb and chorus, the clean can be amazingly bright or a little drony or however you want to make it, the best clean channel i've ever played on. the overdrive tends to have too much gain and isn't nearly as loud as the clean channel, it doesnt really cut through a mix with a band. the channel switching is done with a 2 button switch with channel and chorus on it, or you can just use the buttons on the amp. it could use a little more power for me, but then again i just like playing loud.
Sound Quality
:
9
i use an ibanez gax-70 with humbuckers and a fender strat. this amp perfectly suits me for all the styles i play(mainly alternative with little bits of classic rock). the clean channel breakes up around 6 and the overdrive feeds back like crazy past 7. its has got an amazing variety of sounds, i was really impressed when i got it.
Reliability
:
9
this amp is pretty dependalbe, the 1st of its 2 imputs is a little crakly at times, but nothing a little jiggle cant fix.
Customer Support
:
10
Overall Rating
:
10
ive been playing about 3 years, and playing in an alternative band right now, and this amp is perfect for it. i would definatly try and get a new one if it was stolen.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $268 used
Submitted 08/06/2004
at 05:15pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
8
2 channels, basic treble, middle, bass, gain, limiting, reverb, and chorus. pretty cool for what im used to (some really small epiphone practice amp).
Sound Quality
:
9
I'm using this amp with twin humbuckers on a Stellar Mercury 002 Les Paul and play mainly metal but ill play about anything. this thing can get pretty freakin loud. it gives a pretty good variety of tones. the clean's a little better than the overdriven, but i like the overdrive more because i like the overall, well, overdrive. the clean channel can be deceptive at high volumes. a good number of amps will give you fuzz at high levels, this one, you have to be careful or when you hit a string it'll blow out windows because it wont give a BIT of feedback. the distortion can be pretty awesome with a little tweaking.
Reliability
:
10
I plan to use this amp on my first gig, and i pretty much would bet my life this thing would hold up for a solid year of being on stage without stopping once. never had a problem with it, and probably never will.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never had to deal with 'em
Overall Rating
:
9
i LOVE this amp. ill just tell you that much here
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $240 used
Submitted 06/28/2004
at 08:57pm
by Brian H.
Email: beasley882000 at yahoo<dot>com
Features
:
9
This amp I believe was one of the later ones made.m It has the silver/gray speaker grill and black knobs. Looks very 50's. This is an amplifier of variety and subtle tones. Two channels with a common EQ. I play a lot of older styles and alternative. Two 10 inch speakers give a lot of bass for their size. I am a serious hobbyist who has been playing for 15 years. I don't need a lot of power which is good as this amp is not overpowering but power isn't everything. There is nothing I don't use on this amp. Every knob does something.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use a Fender Fat Strat as well as a Strat that is upgraded with Fender Lace Sensors. Both sound very different through this amp. Both sound very good. I also use a Epiphone Les Paul with DiMarzio pickups. It sounds very heavy. This Princeton Chorus is a lot more quiet than the ones made in the late 80's. I used to be that you could hear the ocean if you turned up the gain too much on the old ones. The limiter is very useful, even at low gain, a fact that Fender overlooked in the manual. With the gain and limiter about halfway and the reverb and chorus turned up it is ethereal with soft picking and harmonics! This amp is a creative tool rather just a 100 watt bullhorn. The nice thing about this amp is that it sounds cranked up even at low volumes so you don't have to turn it up to 7 to enjoy practicing it. This is not an amp for the metalheads out there. It does not sound like the much emulated JCM 800, but then again, not everything should. The chorus sounds incredible with distortion and in fact I think it was really intended to be used in conjunction with it. It is capable of great fuzzy distortions that usual aren't found built into amps. Why spend a grand on stacks only to have to buy a $60 dollar pedal to get the fuzz you want? The clean is amazing with single coil pickups but not so hot with humbuckers. Variety, YES! I can spend all day turning knobs on this amp getting sounds that I actually like rather than trying to find just one that I can live with.
Reliability
:
8
My only gripe with the one that I have is that I have a short in the reverb but I think that could be fixed rather easily as it lies in the spring box rather than the circuitry or the control.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed it.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have a 65 watt valvestate I paid more for and like far less and in fact I am selling it as a result of buying the Princeton Chorus. I would never be without this amplifier in my pocession. It is fairly light to carry even though it has two speakers. It looks classy, sounds great and I get up in the morning to play it. As far as I know it is not made any more so if you want one you have to probably look online and be prepared to bid. There seems to be a lot of demand for this one so I am not sure why Fender decided to stop production on this model. Maybe they should bring it back!
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $400
Submitted 06/12/2004
at 05:53pm
by Thom Shafer
Email: axeman84<at>email dot com
Features
:
7
features have been previously and THOUROGHLY documented in earlier reviews
Sound Quality
:
8
i use an epiphone explorer and carvin dc 135..volume>wah>boss ge-7>tech21 XXL distortion>boss flanger>danelectro stereo chorus>boss dd-5 delay,,,for small to mid-sized gigs, this is an ideal amp. The amps dirty channel can be set for mild distortion, suitable for blues and music not requiring heavy amounts of distortion. The clean channel is very nice, however it does break-up at higher volumes (past 7). The clean channel along w/ flanger/delay combos are capable of producing some "cure"-like tones, while using the tech-21 xxl box will produce a sufficient overdrive sound. I would not recommend this amp for players who are into the metal/hardcore genre...(think mesa/marshall),,Tweaking the dirty channels limit/gain controls will yield tones ranging from a creamy, almost fuzz like distortion to mellower blues sounds reminiscent of SRV/Hendrix. Overall, very versatile. The chief complaint about this amp, well there's 3 ...1) When the chorus is activated, it seems to drain the volume level down a little, my danelectro chorus doesn't do this,,2) Since it is a 2-channel amp, not only should each channel have it's volume knob, and each channel does, but a MASTER VOLUME knob should be incorporated and 3) a "line-out" jack for an extension cabinet would be a nice feature, too,,,but other than that, this is a damn fine amp.
Reliability
:
8
I always carry a back-up processor, and have never had to use it, (knock on wood). I have owned my PC for 8 years in settings from church to bars/clubs and it has never failed me. Have also performed a wide range of music from gospel to country & metal to Top 40 and w/ the right effects (I prefer stomp-boxes and pedals to rack-mounted gear), this amp will deliver most of the needed sounds,,again this is not an amp for metal-heads,,,
Customer Support
:
9
I have never had to deal w/ Fender before, and that's a good thing
Overall Rating
:
8
I have been playing for 20 years and have owned alot of amps (marshall, crate, peavey,ADA). This has been one of the better sounding and more versatile amps I've owned
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $225 used
Submitted 05/05/2004
at 12:40pm
by Flavio
Features
:
10
By now you know the features, 2 channels, mine is more than 2 x 25W, I'm not sure what's up with that, mine has 2 10" speakers, but on back it says 2 x 65 W...? Anyways, chorus, eq, presence, limiter controls on the overdrive channel, reverb, cute red knobs, footswitch for changing channels and turning the chorus on and off. Its a handy amp for practice or small gigs.
Sound Quality
:
9
I've had this amp for about 4 years, and have always been able to play with it and find a slightly new sound here and there. The clean channel sounds very good, distorts slightly at really high volumes, but I've never played it loud enough to do so more than for a second or two at a time. People have complained about the distortion, I have no problems with it, perhaps they should tweak the eq & other controls a bit more...if you really can't get a good sound out of this amp you're probably retarded, or a gigantic snob who isn't pleased with anything.
Reliability
:
10
Absolutely no problems in 4 + years. Couldn't be more pleased.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never tried, don't know. They will always be in business, so that's probably good.
Overall Rating
:
10
Very versitile, good sound, reliable. One of the best alternatives for low-cost amps.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $350 used
Submitted 04/18/2004
at 11:11pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
7
Though i never use a chorus effect i played this amp in the guitar shop and took it home the same day. The clean channel is great cranked up and kick the dirty channel in for added gain and solo's and power chords just rip!
Sound Quality
:
8
This amp cranked up on the clean channel soaked with reverb and treble has twang in it..which is great..i play a gretsch hot rod and a strat with an EMG 81 and i still get that twangy tele sound on solos but kick in the dirty channel and you also get that Reverend horton heat sound.
Reliability
:
10
I havent had any problems with this amp.. the first time i used it at practice i could'nt hear it over the drums and bass. i was worried. so i miked it through the PA..problem solved..this was before the gretsch hot rod. i used a galveston hollowbody..the volume was weak..couple weeks later i plugged the strat in...WOW!!! it cranked..even at a gig...they could'nt mic it cause it was too loud..
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to deal with them
Overall Rating
:
8
I have to give it an 8 cause it's not the dream amp i wanted..but it works..i Play Rockabilly and Hillbilly Punk..i traded an old Ampeg amp w/reverb and tremolo for this princeton..and i'm happy about it..it sounds great..i dont use the chorus,although i did get an almost tremolo effect going with it..i would use the 2nd channel for punk stuff..think social distortion style..other than that i use the clean channel with effects pedals.. If lost or stolen i would probably cry then go to the bar and drink my sorrows away..
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 04/10/2004
at 09:19am
by Anonymous
Features
:
5
you know them already
Sound Quality
:
3
the sounds are very nasal and harsh. The clean channel gets distorted at high volumes and the distortion will kill everyone's ears. I have no idea why anyone would even want to mic this amp. The only way i will use this thing live is to use it on the clean channel at low volume in high school jazz band. Nothing else. The sounds are very limited with this amp.
Reliability
:
5
Nothing major happened to the amp. at high volumes, this amp shakes like a dog after getting wet. it pisses me off.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
meh
Overall Rating
:
4
been playing for a good 8 years. I own many guitars and amps. I own a Marshall jcm 800 head and a 1960 cab. and if you plan to use distortion with this amp, a pedal is a must. oh yeah..this would be a good amp to use as a slave amp. because thats all its good for
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $205 used
Submitted 02/16/2004
at 12:57am
by Andrew
Features
:
8
This amp was made in '94 I believe. I liked the fact that it had reverb, chorus, and 2 separate channels. What really sold me on it was that it had 2 speakers. I don't think there is any other dual speaker amp that you can get for this price. The clean channel was very good. Drive channel leaves something to be desired, not bad though. Also it comes with a 2 button footswitch to switch between channels and chorus.
Sound Quality
:
8
My guitar is a Fender Toronado with dual humbuckers. This amp is incredibly versatile. I was under the impression it was mostly a jazz amp. But it does just fine for the punk band I'm in. I didn't like how much feedback it had but the humbuckers also contributed to that, with single coils it shouldn't be as bad. The clean channel held up at high volumes, just had to keep the bass low. Distortion wasn't the greatest.
Reliability
:
9
This amp has held up extremely well. The only problems I've had was the footswitch breaking. And that was from pretty extreme abuse. A bass player accidentally jumped on it a few times during a song. Other than that, no problems.
Customer Support
:
10
I've dealt with Fender before, not reguarding this amp though. They were extremely helpful.
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing a few years now. Unfortunately I'm looking for something with a little more power. I wouldn't be selling this amp if I weren't playing gigs. I play in a pretty loud band and I'm afraid it just can't stand out very well in the mix over a bass, 2nd guitar, PA, and drums. If I were just using it for practice and small gigs I would definitely not be replacing it.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $359
Submitted 02/11/2004
at 10:02am
by POPS
Features
:
10
HAS LOTS OF GOOD OLD FASHION KNOBS TO TURN.
IT ALSO CAME WITH A FOOT SWITCH, THAT WORKS.
THIS AMP IS GOOD FOR OLD ROCK,COUNTRY,AND IF YOU TWEAK THE OVERDRIVE
CHANNEL RIGHT.IT DOES A DECENT JOB FOR BLUES. NOT FOR METALHEADS(THINK
MARSHALL).GOT IT NEW FROM GUITAR CENTER EARLY "97".
Sound Quality
:
9
GOOD CLEAN TONES. OVERDRIVE OK FOR MILDER STUFF. NICE REVERB,GOOD MILD
CHORUS.
NEED MORE POWER? THEN RUN A LINE OUT FROM (MONO EFFECTS SEND) TO DRIVE A SECOND OR EVEN THIRD AMP.
I HAVE PLAYED STRATS,TELE'S,RICKS,335'S,LES PAULS AND MANY OTHER GUITARS THROUGH THIS AMP. THIS IS WHAT IT IS! A GOOD SOLID STATE AMP.
Reliability
:
10
ROCK SOLID. I HAVE HEARD ,THAT FENDER HAS SOLD OVER 100,000 PRINCETON
CHORUS AMPS.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
NEVER NEEDED SERVICE.
Overall Rating
:
10
I'VE BEEN PLAYING GUITAR FOR OVER 43 YEARS AND HAD ALOT OF GEAR COME
AND GO. THIS AMP IS MY ALL TIME FAVORITE. GOOD TONE,DECENT POWER,LOTS
OF FEATURES FOR THE MONEY. IF SOMEONE STOLE IT,I'D HUNT THEM DOWN AND
LOCK THEM IN MY BASEMENT,AND MAKE THEM LISTEN TO NON STOP LAWRENCE WELK FOR 30 YEARS.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $400 used
Submitted 01/22/2004
at 11:26am
by joseph
Email: js187899 at ohiou<dot>edu
Features
:
8
90's model. i find it very versatile. has clean/overdrive w/chorus. overdrive has nice limiter knob which actually works as a compressor for high gain settings. presence knob works as a high end cut/boost to shape your driven tone from "brash to smooth"(taken from owners manual)
********NOTE TO OWNERS********I found an owners manual on the web at www.mrgearhead.net/faq/pdf/guitarpdf/ Princeton_Chorus.pdf IT helped me understand how to use the effects loop. has some nice diagrams
Sound Quality
:
9
i play with a hamer import with duncan designed humbuckers. i love the distortion i get.(these pickups sound better than my friends les paul studio...no joke, this guitar is underrated) its not going to be metallica-type-distortion, but you can come pretty close. its awesome to play nirvana or punk garbage because the limiter lets me dial in the right kind of sustain(mid boost helps too). i can get a silky smooth santa distortion(which is hard to obtain on other amps, think black magic woman, or any santana song for that matter) or for a little more crunch throw on the bridge pickup, turn on mid boost, limiter down and presence up. very versatile. clean channel is smooth as long as you keep the treble down, otherwise it gets really harsh. if you want a soft bluesy kinda overdrive the clean channel sounds great when cranked up with a bit of reverb and plenty of bass(think stone roses... ooh and you add that chorus!! damn thats good tone. keep bass up and treble downish(5-8)). Oh yeah, and to mention how loud this sum'bitch can go! its not a stack or a half stack, but youll be blown away by what you get out of it.
Reliability
:
10
never broken down. played for days with volume on 8-9 with no audible signs of wear and tear. good for not too big gigs. coffe houses, picnics, small bars, orgies...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
this amp rocks. holds its own with half stack in practice. very versatile. if lost i dont think i would buy one again it because im always into trying something new but as for right now i would not replace it with anything. i'll never get rid of this amp, even if i do get another. what else can i say? its tight.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/26/2003
at 08:15pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
No Opinion
you know the features
Sound Quality
:
3
clean channel is alright although it DOES get distorted at high volumes and it doesn't have much features to get different sounds. i give it a 7. The distortion is a joke. It has lack of tone, crunch, power. its fuzzy and sounds absolutly terrible in the recording studio. Very very very disappointed. i give it a 0. yes a 0
Reliability
:
10
oh its reliable... i have abused this thing like crazy. A couple years ago at a talent show, i stood on it and jumped off it, the amp fell backwards during the performance. this happened twice in my life and it works fine. this amp has also been on the road to recording studios and out of state. so it is trustworthy
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
meh
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
i had to use this amp because my stupid friend's amp (marshall jcm800) broke down and we had to use this stupid thing...big mistake. I own two amps, this and a marshall AVT 50H with a Crate 4x12 with celestion speakers.and i own a gibson les paul, fender fat strat takamine acoustic/electric. Although fender may have a good clean channel, my marshall's clean channel is cleaner and more verstaille. BEAT THAT FENDER! MWA HAHA. if this thing was stolen, i would track him down and force him to buy the amp. Overall this thing sux. i can't use it in the studio, i can't use it live...what am i supposed to do with it?!?!?
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $599
Submitted 12/17/2003
at 06:54pm
by Neal
Email: nrglobal<at>cinci dot rr dot com
Features
:
5
2 channel, 25.5 w per channel, 51 RMS. Not sure what year made, discontinued I believe. Had it for about 2 1/2 years. Clean, distortion with limiter and presence. 2 jacks, one high and one for low impedence. Solid state.
Sound Quality
:
7
Clean is about an 8 at mid range volume, anything over a 7 gets a little distorted, but not too bad as long as you don't crank it. Distortion is about a 6, mabey a 7 if I play around with it. Adding the stereo helps on the clean. On the distortion, I think it actually hurts it. I have read other reviews calling it fuzz as opposed to a crunch, This is about right. At higher volumes gets a bit mushy. When compared to some of the newer amps, such as the Fender DSP 90, or the Marshall mgd100 dfx, which are marketed under the price I paid for the PC, there is no comparison. Both these amps are considerably louder, and sound better. Boy,,,has technology moved so far ahead in just a few short years. In the case of the PC, it has enough power for a small gig, say a garage or something, but this is it.
Reliability
:
10
Well this fender, so far, as reliable as the name. Like Stone.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed it!
Overall Rating
:
7
When this amp came out, it was probably cutting edge solid state. Although I only have had it for 2 1/2 years, I wish I would've done more homework versus the price I paid. It is not a bad amp, but with so many newer amps out there and at much better prices, I am disappointed. There are no realy outstanding qualities about it. The reason I did buy it in the first place was that I had a crate amp, not sure of the name, but about 65 watts, all sorts of effects, fun at first, but problems persisted. In all fairness, the PC blew it away, but i wish I just shopped around a little bit more.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $400
Submitted 12/17/2003
at 12:47pm
by Tony
Email: fdkoolaid<at>aol dot com
Features
:
9
Bought new in '94.
this thing is perfect for me, comes with footswitch to go
between clean and dirty channels, reverb sounds pretty good,
the chorus is nice too, but not too much!
solid state, I like the presence and limiter.
Sound Quality
:
10
I play a '94 Strat, bought at the same time as the amp.
they sound darned good together, I'm not real wild about the
pure clean sounds, except for when I play acoustic through it,
and it seems top handle acoustic duties pretty well.
Mostly I play with a little dirt,
Presence knob up fairly high, limiter down low and gain set to
about five or so. Gives a great blues, classic rock sound.
I was worried about it being solid state, I thought it
wasn't cool and all, you know.
Then I played it and forgot all about that shit!
It's a better sounding amp than my '69 Fender pro reverb.
in fact I never play that one anymore.
Anything higher a than six on the gain channel and it's starts
sounding too 'metal-like' for me. Real thin and shitty.
For me it's a great amp, Folks into the new sounds won't like it much!
Reliability
:
10
Like I said, I bought it new in '94, that's ten years
folks, and it's never been to the repair shop, Although I
never gig with it either, so I don't know how it would stand up.
I hardly ever turn it up past five, in fact never.
That is plenty loud in my finished basement, with a drummer and
bassist.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Have no idea, never had the unfortunate
instance to need them. Not even for the Strat!
Guess Fender makes some good stuff!
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for twenty years,
Lots of acoustic stuff, my Takamine sounds great through this amp.
When I play electric it's a Strat like I've stated, and, well
you, you can't beat matching up a fender with a fender!
I'd buy another one for sure if anything ever happened to it,
but I don't think they are made anymore, they sold zillions of them though so I'm sure I could find a good used one.
I've also got a Peavy Bandit 65 (who doesn't?) and I like it
but it doesn't compare to this Fender at all. Although I like
the pull knobs on the Peavey, and the saturation, it's fun once in awhile, I like it too! My '69 Pro reverb is cool because
it is what it is, but I never play it. I guess I just like saying that
I've got one. for all that's worth, which is nothing!
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/26/2003
at 11:39am
by Anonymous
Features
:
8
Early 90's, Made in USA. Nice unit, compact, light weight and well built. Pretty typical features for a small combo. Analog chorus is exceptional. Mono and stereo effects loops work well. Reverb is decent. 50W SS power is great for practice and smaller gigs. Two ten inch speakers give it a punchy sound.
Sound Quality
:
9
Clean channel is very good. The beauty of this amp is that it is a very versitle little combo. It takes pedals in the front end very well. I've used it with a Mesa V-Twin and Lespaul and have nailed the Santana tone. With a strat and tube screamer I get some very SRVish tones. The amp is not underpowered for gigs, but it does lack some headroom on the clean side. I generally run it about 5/10 and am always miked-up. I have no problem being heard over the drummer. I rarely use the overdrive channel, although I have been able to get some good crunch and moderate distortion out of it. It requires tweaking and I prefer to run pedals anyway. My PC is very quiet. This amp is suited to a wide variety of musical preferences. I play mainly R&B, rock and some funk but have also done some jazz standards and acoustic tunes with it.
Reliability
:
10
Here's the deal, I bought this new in the early 90's and played it quite frequently for a few years. I then shelved it for about 6 years in my damp basement while I got away from electric music. When I pulled it out and dusted it off, it fired up no problem and has been a work horse for the last few years. The screws and jacks are all pitted but I have never had an issue with this baby....knock on real wood.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never contacted them.
Overall Rating
:
9
I'm 41 and have been playing since I was 10. I'm a weekend warrior and gig regularly. I have two quality electric guitars, a 77 strat and an 88 lespaul. I've got a Traynor YCV 40 tube amp also. Have owned a fair amount of gear over the years. I don't think anyone would bother stealing this but I would certainly miss it if they did. I would replace it with a used one off e-bay, i guess if I could find one. I really like the size and clean sound. I consider this amp a sleeper in that most people can't figure out where the great tone is coming from when they see the our band play. I am often complimented on the tone / sound out of this amp, I guess that's priceless huh?
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $250 used
Submitted 08/29/2003
at 06:15am
by Mattie B.
Features
:
8
Not sure what year made, but the schematics diagram had 1988 on the copyright. The Princeton Chorus (PC) is a 2x10, 50 watt amp...certainly a versatile enough amp for my needs! I play mostly classic rock 70's/80's, some newer alternative stuff & very little (but some) metal. The amp is setup almost like a 2 channel (foot-switchable too), but it is not true 2 channel...really one channel that's been parsed into clean & drive settings. It does have mono & stereo loops, but I've never tinkered with them...I'm just a guitar---->effects--->amp kind of guy. Of course a line out would be nice, but you can't have everything, right? I bought this amp after I found out that my little Bronco Tweedy wasn't going to be heard over my drummer at our first gig. I borrowed the other guitarists practice amp for the gig which was a Deluxe 85 and I really liked how it sounded. Anyway, I thought I wanted something like the Deluxe but a little more powerful and one day I stumbled upon the PC in a used shop. Having owned the Bronco for 8 years I was aware of the awesome Fender clean tone, but the on-board chorus just blew my mind!! I had to get it right there!! It was in super-clean shape too...you could tell the previous owner really LOVED her.
Sound Quality
:
8
I am currently using a stock Hamer USA Daytona and I've just wrapped up a project Strat with the David Gilmour EMG's that sounds...well it sounds like my Hamer is going to get reduced to buck private!! Can't say enough about the versatility of the Gilmour EMG's but that's for another review!! The PC sounds absoulutely awesome as my ears get more used to the increased volume & range over my Bronco. You must understand, I have been a student guitarist for years and the Bronco was all the amp I thought I'd ever need (was I wrong). I'd say that the PC is perfect for my style of playing. I'm someone that really likes to start off with high quality clean tone & build from there, so this really works well for me. I don't think I'm ever going to move into Twin Reverb or Dual Showman land with my live playing, so this amp will likely be my baby for years to come. As I 've mentioned the chorus is just phenomenal...it sounds stereo right out of the one amp!! Very lush & pretty...think middle section of "The Trees" by Rush. Alright here's the deal with the distortion. Very unexpectedly creamy!! I was able to really dial in a highly useable crunch within a few minutes. Of course, if you need that extra punch (for metal, say) I recommend the help of a stomp-box. I have an old MXR distortion Plus for this that works very well & gives that classic Randy Rhoads Tribute album sound. Again, this is a very versatile amp...I can go from "Back On the Chain Gang" to "Hurts So Good" with just 2 clicks on the foot-switch.
Reliability
:
8
I've only had the amp for about 2 months but its already a 15 year old work-horse and it's never let me down in either practice or gig.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with Fender and its waaaaaay out of warranty!
Overall Rating
:
8
I've been playing about 10 years. I've had amps by Yamaha (sucked big-time), Peavy (almost sucked even worse!) and Fender. The Fenders have been superior, which should come as no suprise. I have a few stomp boxes that I rely on: DOD Analog delay, MXR Dist +, Boss Flanger, Boss Chorus, & Dunlop Volume Pedal. The on-board chorus on my Princeton means that my Boss will soon be on eBay!! I'm also considering a H&K Tubeman to Fatten my sound a bit and I'm always thinking about finding the ultimate delay unit to pull off "Time" by Floyd!! Any suggestions??
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $250 used
Submitted 08/26/2003
at 02:18pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
9
Dont know the year it was made. mid 90's i think? my band plays mostly alternative rock, not quite metal. think 3 doors down. and i think it suites my style of playing nicely. by now we all know the features, 2 channel, fx loop, etc. I wish that it had some kinda of speaker output. I use this amp for gigs with my band, and also in church. When practicing with our drummer in a small room i never had the volume over 3. we recently did a small outdoor gig and had it up to about 7. if you want to play large venues or large outdoor festivals you will have to mic your amp. it doesn't have enough power to play big shows without being mic'd.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use a Ibanez GAX70 with the stock Powersound pickups. Even with the not-so-great powersound pickups, this amp sounds great. Its fender so the clean channel sounds awesome, and it doesn't distort too bad at high volumes. This is not a metal amp! it will not make you sound like metallica or megadeth. It does have enough gain to almost get to metal though. it can get pretty heavy and pretty brutal if you mess with it long enough. but metalheads should look somewhere else. Even though it won't do metal, the overdrive is beautiful. really smooth. It can get a variety of sounds. 3 doors down to green day, to blues. it can do it all. There are many sounds in this amp that you can discover by playing with it for awhile. just mess around for 10 minutes and you will find 'your' sound. I usually have the presence know all the way up and the limiter all the way down. my one gripe is that the PC doesn't handle alot of bottom end very well. if i turn my bass up too much, it gets really muddled and undefined. The mid boost button is nice. I rarely use stomp boxes for my distortion because i love the overdrive on this amp so much. remember, it can't do metal, but it can get dang near close. The onboard chorus is simply beautiful and reverb is awesome. with my gain cranked and using the chorus and i can get really close to an EVH sound.
Reliability
:
9
I bought this amp used, so i have no idea of its history. but from my experience with fender amps i have to say that they are pretty solid. I would gig with it without a replacement.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with Fender.
Overall Rating
:
9
I have been playing for about 3 years and gigging for about a year and a half. my last amp was a fender champ 30 and i really liked it, but it wasn't powerful enough for me. but i really liked the overdrive so i chose to go with fender again when i bought the pc. If it were lost, i might buy another one, but i might go for something with a little more power. Clean and Dirty channel are both awesome. very nice. i have not gripes except for the way it handles low end sound. my other guitarist in my band played through a 65w Laney combo and the PC blows it away.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: 350 (CAN) used
Submitted 07/11/2003
at 04:44pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
Made in 1988. Chorus is great, reverb too. It's a solid state but who cares??? I tired paying to repair my 68 Bassman head!!!
Sound Quality
:
8
I use a Rickenbacker 360 and a Tele copy with a little 59. I also runs my Norman acoustic guitar with `Lawrence magnetic PU on it. Distortion is good for lead but I also use a Danelectro Pastrami Overdrive and a Boss DS-1.
Reliability
:
8
When I bought it the two input jack are in and out. Really easy to fix... and less expensive than my 68 Bassman head to fix!!!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never have to deal with.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I play for ten years mostly alt-country, folk and country-rock. I previously own a Peavey bandit, 68 Bassman Head (to much trouble), a Peavey Classic 30... I decide to go with solid state amp because I'm tired to pay for a tube amp problems... I'm looking for a Roland Jazz Chorus but when I try the Princeton chorus I know it can do the job
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: 600 (CAD)
Submitted 04/11/2003
at 09:49am
by DJS
Features
:
9
The features have already been discussed at length. Everything I could wish for, except a standard line out. Not enough power I guess. You can slave another amplifier though... I play with a guy running a Marshall stack and though the little guy holds it own, a slave setup gives me some extra depth that is certainly welcome.
I play a lot of classic rock, with a good measure of contemporary stuff thrown in - Stones, Beatles, Collective Soul, etc.
Overall, for the size and price, the features are excellent.
Sound Quality
:
9
My main guitar is a Wasburn/Grover Jackson Telecaster with Seymour Duncan Broadcasters. Its solid swamp ash and produces lots of bite and sustain. This amp is perfect for it. My buddy's '02 Strat works nicely though it as well.
The clean channel, as has been copiously reported, is great. I add a little chorus and MXR compression (via a Line 6 DM4 pedal). All I can say is wow.
The dirty channel took some more work to get a good tone. Compression on top made all the difference. Add Mid Boost and lots of presence it crunches nicely. Alternatively, I run the clean channel and use the DM4 to emulate an overdrive pedal. Not nearly as much character this way, but it works well for certain songs.
Speaking of pedals, I use the DM4 for lead work. Clean channel and a Line 6 overdrive setting, or a Rat emulation and the dirty channel. Both cut like a chain saw through balsa wood.
I give it a 9... 10 for the clean and 8 for the dirty.
Reliability
:
10
Rock solid. Portable. Had it for 3 years without issue and don't expect to have any.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for almost 30 years. Used to play for a living, but am now a weekend warrior. This has been my primary rig for the past couple of years, with the exception of pedals that have come and gone.
I've dabbled with the idea of getting a bigger amp, a tube amp, even a digital modeler, but am loathe to give up that awsome clean tone. I suppose if I started playing larger venues 25 watts aside wouldn't cut it, but until then I'll hold onto this puppy.
To be honest, if it were lost I'd probably look for something in the Fender line with the same features and a little more power. I'd certainly use the Princeton Chorus as the yardstick though.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: 700 (AUD)
Submitted 03/13/2003
at 04:49pm
by Steve
Email: shadowbolt<at>iinet dot net dot au
Features
:
8
We all know the specs on this one by now, so I won't repeat. 2 channels, one dirty, one clean. I tend to run on the dirty channel for the most part. Good ability to EQ the unit, doesn't lose tone when you do. Love the mid-boost and presence options for the overdrive. Reverb on the unit is simply excellent. Chorus full but I rarely use on-board chorus anyway.
In this day and age, the amp may seem a bit light on features, but it has everything that is really important, and whats more, what it does have works very, very well.
Sound Quality
:
9
I run this amp primarily with a Cole Clark Defender (strat-style), also an Ibanez RG470 and an Onyx 336 semi. Its actually because of the semi that I bought it in the first place - it was the ONLY (and I mean ONLY) amp in the store under $2500- AUD that sounded good with it. Rich and full, heaps of life in the sound. Obviously its a great clean amp - the overdrive tended to be lifeless with the semi- (not entirely unsurprizing) but very nice with the others, particularly the Cole Clark. That combination is beautiful - bright, biting tone with a hint of extra warmth, and killer sustain.
Effects pedals it takes nicely, however a real benefit is to run units like the V-AMP and POD units through the dual line-ins. This eliminates the common problems experienced when running those unit types inline with a standard channel. I have a V-AMP 2 and it couples in very, very well.
No noise of operation apart from a very, very quiet hum. Certainly MUCH better than most amps in that regard.
I play a wide range of music, and this amp caters to it all, no problem. I'd almost call it an infectious sounding amp - all my friends who have run a guitar through it covet it.
Reliability
:
9
I've used it for nearly 6 years and its not given a glitch. It survived a 3600km (2000 miles) trip on the back of a truck and still sounds as good as it did before it left. I can't see it ever giving up on me.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never spoke to them, don't expect I ever will. Previous experience with Fender tells me they are a nuisance to deal with, but I can't taint this review by bad experiences with their guitar department.
Overall Rating
:
9
If it gave up totally, I'd certainly go looking for another one. Its probably the most versatile amp I've ever used, and for a single amp user, its probably the best thing you can get. Bit weak on stage (need to mic it for anything larger than a small clubroom) but the tone quality never goes away, not even at high volumes. A real little pearler !
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $20.00 used
Submitted 03/13/2003
at 10:54am
by Bill C.
Email: bill_coop at hotmail<dot>com
Features
:
7
I have no idea when this amp was made. I've been the third person to have it according to the 72 year old fellow I bought it from. 51 total watts bridged with 25.5 watts in stereo (according to the Fender web site). Two 10 inch custom made Eminence speakers, although they are labeled Fender. Plenty of knobs and they are the black ones so this one must be a Mexican model. Two channels (Hi Z and Low Z), stereo send and return jacks, mono send and return jacks, footswitch jack and headphone jack. Clean section has the normal volume, bass, mid, treb and reverb controls. Overdrive section has gain, limiter, prescence, volume, a selector button switch and a mid boost button switch. The chorus section has rate and depth controls and a selector button switch.
Sound Quality
:
5
This amp has the standard Fender squeal to it. It hisses, at high volume, with a noise gate plugged into it! The clean channel is one of the best around and the distorion is weak (just like any other Fender amp), but it is fun to play with. Originally the distortion channel was broken, but I fixed it. It had a small piece of crap in the button switch that had worked into it and I pulled it out and it works fine (for a Fender) now! It hisses, no matter what I do, at high volumes. Different guitars, different cords, noise gates, filters... it doesn't matter. Somebody must like it, because it seems that everything Fender makes has that annoying hiss to it!!?!
Reliability
:
6
I haven't a clue! I'm supposedly the third person owning it since it was new, so I would guess that its fairly durable. All the tolex is in good shape and the chrome corners are shiny and new looking. The grill cloth has a small snag in it. Sheesh, I only paid $20.00 for it beacuse the old man I bought it from didn't use the distortion and wasn't aware that it had a problem. He said he used it to gig at old folks homes and it was getting to heavy for him!!! He wanted $100.00 for it, but I talked him down because of the distortion channel. I couldn't pass it up at $20.00 because even if the gain channel was busted, I could have used pedals on it, but I found the problem and I'm looking to sell it now.
Customer Support
:
1
What... Fender support??? HAHAHAHAHAHAHA. Whatever is wrong... it has to be your fault. It couldn't be any problem with Fender's manufacturing! If you can't tell... that's the zenith of sarcasm.
Overall Rating
:
7
It's a practice amp and a decent one at that, but I doubt that it would carry over any drummer unless they used marshmallow tipped sticks to play with.
If it were stolen, I would be pissed, cause I'm going to make a nice tidy profit off this amp when I sell it.
I love the fact that it was so easy to repair, but other than that I can't think of a thing I like about this amp. If I used it as a practice amp, I would give it a 7 across the board, but I don't use it for that. I have hooked it up in a stereo config with a 120 watt Crate head, Digitech GNX3 and an Ibanez 4x12 cab. The Crate rig was my left channel and the fender was the right. I have the Crate on 3 and the Fender dimed out. I can get some really cool tones through the two and I think it would carry over a drummer in this configuration, but I haven't done this, its just my perception of the amount of volume. It even hisses with the GNX 3 plugged into it.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $275 new on close out.
Submitted 03/09/2003
at 12:58pm
by Glenn Baker
Email: riverrat<at>lyn dot net
Features
:
10
This amp was made in 1999 or 2000 and discontinued soon after. This solid state amp has it all in my books. Great Fender sound, terrific lush reverb and the best analog chorus effect I've heard. The analog chorus outdoes any digital chorus made. It is a 2 channel (clean and overdrive) amp that is foot switchable between channels. The reverb and chorus play thru both channels, chorus on/off is foot switchable. Mono/stereo effects loops, footswitch, Hi-Lo input and phone jacks on the front. Phone jack also doubles as an line out. The EQ is shared as is a very nice and lush reverb. The reverb in this amp puts a lot of tube amp reverbs to shame. Rated at 51 watts or 25.5 watts RMS per channel, the amp is noiseless and perfect for studio work. A gig might need to be mic'd thru the house P/A. I use this amp for older country, older rock-n-roll, older rock-a-billy and older pop music and it handles everything that I want to play with ease and perfect sound reproduction using either single coils or humbuckers. Power output is plenty for any application with a sparkling and rich Fender type sound.
Sound Quality
:
10
I play solid body and semi hollow body guitars thru this amp and it makes any guitar sound rich and vibrant. These guitars are not high end items with custom expensive pickups, but moderate priced guitars like Peaveys, Yamaha and Heritage yet they sound like a million dollar instrument. I use only the clean side of the amp so this review is useless to someone who wants to know about it's distortion. I use the overdrive channel as another clean channel. Clean sound is my tone with reverb, chorus and trem/vibrato. It has a variety of sounds, very EQ-able amp in fact. At idle this amp is graveyard quiet despite overhead lights, other amps or guitars, etc.
Reliability
:
10
I've owned this amp for almost a year now and I still marvel at it's sound. No problems with it at all and none anticipated as most problems associated with a new amp usually shows up in the first few months of use due to bad tubes, bad cold solder joints, defective new parts, etc. If you get the amp thru the first 6 months, the bugs should be out of it. I would count on this little gem with no back up at all. I take care of it accordingly as well, with a lot of TLC.
Customer Support
:
1
Fender Customer Support to me is not user friendly, I've bought a lot of new guitars and amps from Fender in the past and had lots and lots of troubles. Seldom did they play right out of the box, as we say, because they didn't play before they went into the box. Hopefully you have an adequate and ample dealer that will help you out as a middle person/repair service/service techs. My amp came with a 3 year limited warranty. If any trouble occurs, it'll go back to the dealer locally, who is great to work with, but I do not anticipate problems now. Buying a new Fender instrument thru mail order is risky and should be avoided in my thinking. Count on spending a lot of return postage or suggest you push the dealer to pay for return shipping.
Overall Rating
:
10
Here is the shocking news. I always played thru tube amps like Fender, Traynor, Peavey, Gibson combos some 1x12, some 2x12 and some 4x10 powered. Since I've owned this solid state Princeton Chorus, I have sold my big tube combos because they could not compare in sound and reliability. Tubes need changing, maybe amp needs re-biasing, every 6 months or so plus even new tubes get damaged thru shipment, so that expensive hassle and headache is over with. Why did I buy this? I had just tried out a new Fender tube Vibrolux at the Vox Box in Marshall, MO., looking to better my sound. The Vibrolux sounded lousy so as I was walking out of the store I noticed this new Princeton Chorus amp on closeout. I plugged in and instantly knew this was the amp for me. It out performed the $1,000 Vibrolux hands down. When I got it home, I A/B'd it with my Peavey Ranger 2x12 and Traynor 4x10 tube amps and it out done them as well, so they were listed and sold on eBay. I wish it had an onboard tremolo or vibrato as well as the reverb and chorus it does have, but I use my Boss TR-2 tremolo F/X pedal and I'm cooking. Nothing to hate here, all great. Before buying the Princeton Chorus I tried a new Fender Princeton DSP and Fender Twin, both went back for a refund pronto. Both sounded lousy right out of the box!! This little solid state gem sounded great from the get-go and continues to out perform any amp I've owned or knew of. I can save a minimum of $100 per amp per year for new tubes. I never thought that this old tube head would see this day, selling his huge tube amps settling for a small solid state amp. I have never been sorry tho, even bought a new solid state Roland JC 90 2x10 Chorus Amp and I will review that at a later date. It sounds pretty great as well but still the Fender is my fav.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $350
Submitted 03/08/2003
at 08:45pm
by CJ
Email: rebelwocause17 at hotmail<dot>com
Features
:
7
This amp is made back in the day of 1995 in a little country known as Mexico... yeah you know the features so lets move on shall we?
Sound Quality
:
7
I'm in a punk rock band and in a jazz band. This amp fits well in every category. I normally have my amp's distortion volume above 8 when playing in my punk rock band and I get drowned by the fellow bandmates. and that brings me to a question? why would this guy below here only have his volume at 2 and touring???? thats how loud I use it in my bedroom playing by myself and for myself.
Well anyways the amps distortion is decent. I use a fender american strat, an epiphone les paul, an epiphone sg, a b.c. rich warlock, squier fat strat, and a karera strat copy. All these guitars sound good through it. The american strat and the sg give it a good crunchy sound. not too much bass or too much treble. the les paul gives it a nice warm clean crunch. b.c. rich warlock sucks and I am selling it.
The clean sound is great. It would fool some professionals without looking at the amp thinking it was a tube amp. I use this for my jazz band and it's awesome. Once again my les paul is my main axe. (les pauls are very verstaille)
Reliability
:
10
hundreds by hundreds of gigs. never broke down. Had it for 6 years. Very realible even though of the harsh neglectance.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never had the need to contact customer support
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Really good amp. If lost I wouldn't buy it again because I have my eyes on a marshall jcm 2000 dsl 100 head that I tried out in a store. But I recommend this for anybody that wants a verstaille amp that can cover a lot of tones. (great with pedals) well you try it out and see what you think about it. If you have any questions/commment...ect give me an email
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $365
Submitted 03/06/2003
at 10:01am
by Tony
Features
:
8
Purchased in 1997, this amp has a wide range of features.
1. Reverb
2. Chorus
3. Standard 3-band eq
4. 2 channels--Normal and Overdrive
5. Presence control for Ovedrive
6. Pre/post volume in overdrive channel
7. Lots of effects loop stuff
This amp accomadates many different styles of playing. The presence control in Overdrive is a nice touch. The two effects loops seem nice, but I've honestly never used them.
Sound Quality
:
7
I use my late 90's Ibanez Artist AR300 with stock humbuckers through this amp. The clean tone on this amp is good, especially once you start adding the smooth reverb and glassy chorus. The overdrive is solid, and the presence control gives you that little bit of extra control.
Don't expect this amp to push out massive volume--its two 10" speakers will start to distort when you get really loud. If you're playing with a loud drummer, realistically you'll need to mic your amp.
Reliability
:
9
Very dependable, but some soldering points did break after I left the thing out in the trunk of my car in 5 below zero weather. Easily fixed.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never contacted them.
Overall Rating
:
7
I've been playing guitar on and off for 17 years. The amp I've just purchased to replace this one is a new Peavey Classic 30 (one 12", tube amp). For a first real amp, the Fender was a good choice. If you can pick this one up used for $250 or less, then consider it. Its a workhorse and it sounds fine.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $250 used
Submitted 02/25/2003
at 06:01pm
by nate
Email: C04nathan<dot>reynen at usafa<dot>edu
Features
:
7
Late 90's 2 channel amp, everything you'd expect... Footswitchable channels/chorus. One reverb for both, midboost switch for channel two. Stereo effects loop, mono effects loop, headphone jack which cuts the speakers. Twin 25.5 Watt amps going to two 75 Watt rated 10" speakers. All solid state.
Sound Quality
:
7
I use a US Strat with Kinman AVN blues PU's. Am a bit of a Fender guy, play everything from pop to hard rock, however favorite guitar sound is probably along the lines of Nickleback on Silver Side Up, or Defaults new stuff. This amp is a sterotypical Fender and has a great sounding clean channel. One of the best I've heard from a non tube amp. Most people complain about the distortion channel, however it's not bad at all, and it sounds pretty nice once you crank it (volume, not gain). Like the 10" sound, more mids, unique. Chorus is nice, think Come As You Are... Pretty quiet on the clean channel, a bit noisy dirty. Lots of headroom for an amp this size. Dirty channel is significantly louder than dirty. Keeps up with a drummer well, bigger venues you will be drowned out. However for smaller shows it worked ok, and the other guitarist had a 100 Watt half stack. Clean channel breaks up pleasantly at high volumes. No metal from this amp, you'll need a pedal. Pretty much everything from country up till about Three Doors Down.
Reliability
:
10
This is where this amp never stops to amaze me. I played on this thing for several hours a day during high school for several years, at LOUD volumes, and not a single problem. Overbuilt, overbuilt, overbuilt. No way you'll blow these speakers as they're rated at three times the power that goes to them. No problems at all at playing at near max volumes for extended periods of time. This thing will not break on you.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had any experience - see above...
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing for 8 years or so and have a Hot Rod Deville in addition to this amp. In my opinion this is the ULTIMATE practice amp, it's a great deal and is an awesome value for all you cash strapped high schooler/ college kids out there. It makes a very cost effective garage band amp that doesn't sound like trash - ie Crate and is not ridiculously priced, ie Marshall. If you have any questions feel free to shoot me an email.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $340
Submitted 01/23/2003
at 09:11am
by Stephen Tietjen
Features
:
8
I bought it new in 1998. It's stereo with 2 wonderful 10" speakers. It's got chorus, reverb, distortion, and clean. Great options for stereo and mono! I just wish I could turn on and off the reverb.
Sound Quality
:
7
I use a PRS and a Road house Strat through it. It's extreemly powerful! I toured with it and never turned it above 2. That was even in front of 1200. I recomend it for blues players but not for big medal thrashers. The amp is ment to be tight and punchy with good compression. The distortion channel sucks! It sounds like I'm just farting into a mic at times. But the clean sound is oh so sweet!
Reliability
:
10
I toured 1 1/2 years with it and played about 360 shows. My bass player knocked it over twice. Once he put a SM57 through the grill and then put a SM57 through the speaker. It just kept on going. Perfect durability!
Customer Support
:
3
Warranties are very difficult to redeem with Fender. If you try to redeem any kind of warranty they make up excuses on why it is not their fault. Although this amps warranty has never needed to be used my other fender equipment has and although polite people they are very stingy.
Overall Rating
:
8
I have played for about 8 years and although this is no longer my main amp I do find it difficult to get rid of. It's a great clean amp.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $400
Submitted 01/05/2003
at 11:09am
by Anonymous
Features
:
6
it has what a normal musician needs. but why I give this a 6 is because there aren't very many features for the distortion. The main thing I want I want on this amp is a scoop. I play in a punk rock and I need that scoop sound that you would find in a punk rock band
Sound Quality
:
7
The clean sound is beyond great. Its everything I need. I play it with a les paul and a stratocaster and it sounds really good through both of them. the amps distortion however is kinda disappointing. I have recorded with this amp and its really muddy. I have messed with the dials a lot and it gives you either a bluesy eric clapton tone or a muddy "wannabe" metal tone. Its sounds alright though. But my fellow guitarist that's in our band uses a crate stack(gfx-1200h head) (gx412xs cab) which kicks total ass. I would check out that amp.
Reliability
:
10
I gig with this amp and it is beyond dependable. It has taken its abusement on the road, humitity, stage and rain and it is still working as if it was brand new.
Customer Support
:
6
meh... they could answer my questions....
Overall Rating
:
7
It's alright. but not that much variety in tone when it comes to the distortion. but other than that its an alright amp
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: $400 (Australian dollars) used
Submitted 11/30/2002
at 08:27pm
by James Craswell
Email: mentaloz at hotmail<dot>com<dot>au
Features
:
9
This amp [late 1990's moddel] has some great for an amp of it's size. It's rare for an amp in this class to have anything but reverb and a drive, and if you set up the chorus correctly, it can be a crude form of tremolo. The drive can get a little muddy, but otherwise a very versatile setup.
Sound Quality
:
9
This is the most versatile solid state I've ever played. In my band, I play some pretty heavy stuff, but this amp can do it all to an acceptable standard. From Eric Clapton, to Limp Bizkit.
Reliability
:
8
I bought this amp second hand. In the back of it, I found a wasp nest, a tech deck and masses of cobwebs. So this amp must have been neglected in the past. But it just doesn't die! I thrash it a fair bit, but it takes all the beatings. Only trouble is it tends to drive when the volume goes higher than 6 or so
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
It's too new to need fixing just yet, but it's lasted these two years ok.
Overall Rating
:
8
I've been playing for 6 and a half years and this amp does the job just fine. But, despite it's greatness, it's still only a solid state and i hope to get an all valve marshall or somthing to replace it when the money rolls in. But a message to any beginers, the fender dyna-touch series is the way to get started.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $400
Submitted 11/16/2002
at 07:41pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
7
solid state amp made in 1995 in Mexico. 125 W of power.
Sound Quality
:
10
Distortion is great for a punk rock band. The people who dis the distortion just need to find the right setting, because this amp's distortion is just as good or better than marshall's or crates. Clean channel is the best. I don't think you can find a cleaner sound than this. Great for Jazz or some classic rock
Reliability
:
10
I gig with this amp once a week, playing punk rock. I turn up the distortion up full blast, no problems here. I carry it all around the place, no problem here. I guess its built like a rock. oh by the way, just to let you know, if you plan to gig with this in a crowd over 200 you need PA speakers. Trust me on this...
Customer Support
:
10
Such a good company, I never had to deal with them
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Very nice amp. Recomend it to anyone, with any type of music style. Very verstaile. Not powerful enough for large gigs, but good enough for small gigs. wonderful wonderful amp
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: 400 (britain)
Submitted 10/28/2002
at 09:36am
by dan davies
Email: welsh_bowman at msn<dot>com
Features
:
10
this has 2 channels,headphone jack ,three effects built in, and comes with a foot switch, and an effects loop
Sound Quality
:
9
the clean sound with the right mixture of chours and reverb gives it the type of sound as used by jimmi hendrix on little wing.The distortion is disapointing if you are looking for a very heavy sound like metallica or system of a down but if you are looking for a warm or crunchy blues sound then this has everything you want .Despite what a lot of people have said this amp is all you need for gigs in pubs or clubs.This is not a practice amp!!!!!!!
Reliability
:
10
I have had this amp for 2 years and i have had no problems with anything.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
I think this amp is suitable for profesionals and intermiediate players.I have to use extra effects such as distortion to get the sounds which i want.But overall this is a great amp!!!!!!
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $695.00
Submitted 09/06/2002
at 06:08pm
by Kelly
Email: none
Features
:
10
THIS IS A GREAT LITTLE BEAST " MADE IN THE 80'S AND THIS IS THE U.S.A. MADE MODEL .. "LIKE MEXICO" BOO.. ANYWAY THIS IS A GREAT FENDER OF COURSE ITS JUST MADE TO SOUND LIKE THE DATE MADE . I TAKE THIS AMP ANYWHERE AND ITS ALWAYS WORKING BUILT STRONG. ALSO WOULD LIKE TO MENTION IF YOUR GOING TO PLAY WITH THE LOUD BOYS "JUST TURN IT UP IT WILL MEET YOUR DEMANDS. "THIS WILL FIT IN YOUR TRUNK"
Sound Quality
:
9
75 GUILD "ROCK-YER-BILLY" CLEAR SOUND ANY SOUND YOU NEED.. DISTORTION ITS GOOD..
Reliability
:
9
I JUST CANT BREAK IT..
Customer Support
:
10
TOO OLD FOR SUPPORT MAYBE DEPENDS...
Overall Rating
:
10
40 YEARS OF PULLIN THEM SAME STRINGS..
IF IT GOT RIPPED IT WOULD BE HARD TO FIND THE USA MADE RED BUTTON MODEL..
I WISH IT CAME WITH A 20 YEAR OLD SWISS GIRL TO SIT THERE AND LOOK PRETTY WHILE I PLAY..
DAM GOOD AMP..
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $250 used
Submitted 08/22/2002
at 03:30pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
7
2 channel solid state with footwitch, built in chorus, headphone jack, 2 input jacks, a bunch of jacks I don't know how to use...
Sound Quality
:
8
I play a 2 pickup Jaguar which is VERY versatile. Between the axe and the amp, I can make just about any sound I want. I usually play clean. This amp has a beautiful clean channel complemented by some very sweet chorus. My beef is that when I turn up the bass for those fat lows, I can hear some fuzzy buzzing from the amp, but I did buy it used. Other than that, if you want a little edge for blues you can turn on the drive channel. The presence on my drive channel doesn't seem to have any effect on the tone. That annoys me, but I'm not that dependent on the drive channel. Don't buy this amp to play Slipknot covers, buy it to make beautiful sounds and really let the chords ring out. I hear a little buzz when I turn it up but maybe it's my guitar, I don't know. Overall, great sound with slight tinnyness on high treble and slight crackle on high bass.
Reliability
:
10
Ten Ten Ten
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
7
I've been playing for ten years and I'm glad I bought this amp. I use a crybaby wah pedal but no stomp boxes. Great clean sound for lead or rhythm. Ok distortion for slight edge. Footwitch is convenient. Open back where I like to keep patch chords, bottleneck, tuning fork and other stuff.
If I lost it I would be likely to look for a new one, but I got such a great deal I might just shell out for a Peavy Transtube instead for that clean sound and have a better drive channel just for fun.
Overall, great clean sound for a solid state. Try one before you rule it out!
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: 400 (canadian)
Submitted 08/04/2002
at 12:15am
by steve
Features
:
7
I won't list the features as they are already covered in detail by other posters.
Sound Quality
:
5
I'm using a 1981 semi-hollow body stereo Ibanez that's a copy of the Gibson E-335. The way it works basically is that you run one amp through the back pick-up and one amp through the front. With it is a 5 position switch that allows you to run one pick-up hotter than the other or both at equal levels. Works great, especially with digital delay where you get that "slapping" effect between both amps ala Brian May on Brighton Rock.
I bought this amp because a buddy of mine had one and after I played through it a few times in his recording studio I took the plunge and picked one up new in 1995. I rarely play clean through this amp but when I do I'm somewhat satisfied with the overall quality. At higher volumes it seems to "pop" a bit, perhaps due to my sometime inconsistant picking style. As far as the distortion goes, my PC loses a lot of flavour when I start cranking it up so I recommend using a stomp box. I use a DOD Grunge FX69 pedal that puts the built-in distortion to shame. I've never gigged with this amp because it doesn't have the balls for it but that's ok because I bought for practicing/recording. I have no problems with the chorus but the reverb fails to deliver anything spectacular. The other con I have about my PC is no mono speaker output jack(s).
The biggest plus to my PC is the headphone jack. When I play through the speakers the amp sounds a bit tinny and hollow but when I play through the headphones the amp's distortion sounds considerably thicker without the aide of any stomp boxes. Because of this my PC becomes ideal for home recording as I send the stereo signal right to my computer's soundcard (Soundblaster Live!)where I'm able to add a respectable reverb before placing the signal in the multi-track software I use. Too bad my PC can't deliver this kind of thick sound through its own speakers.
Reliability
:
10
As far as reliability goes, my PC is top notch. Not once since 1995 has this amp given me any problems whatsoever and I actually don't expect any. It seems this amp will basically run forever and I've never worried about any kind of breakdown.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I've never had to deal with Fender service so I can't comment here.
Overall Rating
:
4
I've been playing about 25 years and owned various gear from Marshall/Hi-Watt/Fender/Vox stacks to practice amps both solid state and tubed. Lot's of guitars and stomp boxes, recording equipment, stage equipment etc. If I ever had to replace this amp I doubt I would. Not this particular model anyway. I've never been a big fan of solid state so I'll probably go back to a tube practice amp as I have in years past. That's not to say I wouldn't by a Fender again. If I ever find a sweet deal on a Twin Reverb I'm there.
In closing all I can say is that my 1995 version of the PC is middle of the road at best. Not a great jamming amp but a ok practice amp and a considerably better recording amp if using the headphone jack to deliver the signal. I haven't dismissed the idea that my particular PC wasn't the greatest of models, especially when I read some of the other reviews. Maybe 1995 wasn't a great year for PC.
I sold a older 40w tube Crate combo to buy this PC because the tubes weren't delivering that fat, deep sound it once did so instead of replacing the tubes I dumped it off and bought the PC. In hindsight I probably should've replaced the tubes when the time came.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $430
Submitted 07/24/2002
at 08:03pm
by Fa Fa Fooey
Features
:
7
Purchased in 1999.
Features two channels, (clean, overdrive), reverb, and chorus. Footswitch included. Probably some other crap but I don't remember.
Sound Quality
:
5
Though built as a 2 channel amp, it's really only a one channel.
The clean tone is decent. Clear and punchy. Reverb is spacious, and chorus nice and deep. No problem here.
Overdrive is worthless. Cheap sounding. Painful. Thin. Weak. You get the idea. Distortion pedal a must if you plan on playing above volume "1," or anything resembling heavy metal. Amp overdrive might work for an ultra poor 8th grade punk band sound.
Reliability
:
8
Worked fine for all 3 years I had it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
This had a 5 year limited warranty. Never had to use it.
Overall Rating
:
6
I got this as a beginner and didn't know what I was doing. The cleans are strong, if that's all you want. The overdrive is very dissapointing.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $350
Submitted 07/15/2002
at 06:25pm
by Mark Tullo
Email: markt_38 at yahoo<dot>com
Features
:
9
Purchased in 1998. Two channels, stereo. Chorus, effects loop & reverb. Not sure of the wattage--either 25 watts a side or 35. Loud enough for me. Tone controls for the 'Overdrive' channel would be an improvement...a bit more flexibility never hurts.
Sound Quality
:
10
I have a '77 Les Paul Standard with older Seymour Duncans, a Stock '98 USA Strat and a Ibanez Joe Satriani model, and they all sound great with this little monster. The clean channel is excellent and typical for a Fender amp, (esp when used with a touch of chorus) and the overdrive channel is great, despite some of the comments I've read here. Take the 'limiter' down to zero, put the gain on 10 and hit the mid boost, and it screams. I can get an excellent George Lynch sort of tone out of this amp with no problem and play everything from VH to Zep to Satriani with it. I've had nothing but great comments regarding the distortion tone of this thing. I use a Boss DS-1 distortion to kick it up a bit further, and using that pedal to me makes it almost a 3 channel amp...clean, crunchy or brutal. As far as the volume goes I have played clubs with it no problem and have never needed to mike it up, so it's a lot more than just a 'practice' amp. Unless you're into ear bleeding, 'take out the walls' volume, this works just fine. It's also a hell of a lot easier than dragging a Marshall half stack around with you come gig time. The noise is only a bit of a problem when I kick the DS-1 in, otherwise I don't think it's that big a deal.
Reliability
:
10
I never worry about having a backup for this thing. Never had a problem of any kind. Set it down and crank it up...nice and simple.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to deal with them.
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for 25 years and have owned Marshalls and Mesa Boogies. Needless to say this PC doesn't have the features/volume/versatility that a MKIV Mesa has, or perhaps the flat out volume of a Marshall, but for what does have and what is cost me it I love the thing. If it got stolen I would get on EBay and buy another one, no question. If there was anything that I'd like to change (other than tone controls for the overdrive channel) I wish that Fender put this out with 12" speakers instead of the 10's it has...give you a bit more bottom end...sort of a smaller version of the 'Ultimate Chorus'. I give it a '9' only because nothing is perfect...for $350 it's pretty damn close!
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $530 with tax
Submitted 07/15/2002
at 10:30am
by andrew boyd
Email: stratmaster48<at>aol dot com
Features
:
9
Discontinued Solid state 2x10. it includes volume, treble, bass, middle, and reverb in the clean channel. in the overdrive channel it has gain, mid boost, limiter, presence, and volume. The chorus effect has depth, and rate. It includes a mono, and stereo bypass system. 2 inputs. Headphone Jack.
Sound Quality
:
8
It sounds great in the clean channel, but kind of weak in the overdrive channel.
Reliability
:
10
I have owned it for 2 years, and i have had absolutely no problems!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing for 7 years. I also own a peavey 1x12. I have 2 electrics, custom strat, and ibanez. If it were stolen or lost I would definately have to find somewhere to get it again. I love the tone this amp puts out! If anyone has a chance to grab this amp, do it. Even if its just a practice amp, its well worth it!!!
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $600
Submitted 04/21/2002
at 01:48pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
This amp is one of the better amps to get. It can do just about anything. This amp is the newer version. Made in 1999 in Mexico. And you know the rest of the features...
Sound Quality
:
8
This amp has unlimited amount of different tones it could produce. Not just the amp alone. It will be great if you are recording songs or hooking up pedals, or playing with it with different instruments. I love the clean sound. Great! I play mostly jazz and this is the perfect sounding amp I found. I however dislike the distortion, but that's what distortion pedals are for!
If you are just a beginner, you shouldn't start off with an expensive amp like this. You should buy a nice practice amp like a Crate or Fender Frontman or Marshall or something.
Reliability
:
10
I play in a jazz band, and our school owns a crappy Peavy bandit 112. So I bring my amp to school once a week to play and it has never failed on me. Built like a rock.
Customer Support
:
10
These guys are really nice. My Fender Strat had some neck problems so I sent it to the company. They kept the guitar and gave me a nicer one with the color I wanted with no charge.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing for about 5 years and this is the best amp I've heard yet. Not the best for distortion, but the best for clean sound. (If you are looking for a great distortion amp, look for a Marshall) I play almost anything except country. And with the right equipment and the right gear, you could play almost any type of style you want.
I now own about four guitars and two amps. This being my favorite.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $275 used
Submitted 03/06/2002
at 12:38pm
by K
Features
:
9
I own a Princeton Chorus. the red knob version. i'm not sure what year it is. This amp is the best that i have owned. I have never regreted it. it has two channels, a clean and an overdrive channel. it has effects loop, but i bought it used and i don't know how to use it since it didn't come with the manual. It also has a headphone jack. it's knobs are red and the knobs are Volume, High, Mid, Low, Reverb, gain, limiter, persence, gain volume, and the chorus has speed, and depth. It has about as much things that i want. This amp has 25w per speaker, 50 watts total, but i use the distortion alot and if it's cranked on the distortion, the speakers with start to distort, and it sould me hooked up a cab.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use a fender fat strat, with a humbucker at the bridge position. this guitar has a nice low and high end sound. it works well with the fender princeton chorus. Because it is an 80's amp the distortion was made for 80's rock, but when i cranck up the high and the low it will give me a very, very nice cruch. on the lighter side, the clean channel is very versital and unique. lot's and lot's of tone, more than i have ever known. its clean channel is made for clean, at the highest that it can go, full 50 watts, it won't distort at all. it makes it a very good amp.
Reliability
:
10
This amp is about 20 years old, ands never has it broke down. this is a gig amp, no question, just need's to be miced. total reliable. it's fender, and fender has a rep. for building good sounding, and long lasting insterments.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
i have been playing for 10 years. i own my fender guitar, this princeton chorus, an ibanez Smask box, Danelectro chorus, and a morley power wah.
If it was stolen, i would most deffinetly buy another if i could find one, there kinda hard to find, the red knob version that is.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 02/21/2002
at 11:04am
by wallop
Features
:
9
Bought new in 2001.
Within the Fender spectrum of sounds, this is a very versatile amp. Above that, you should get something else. It can, however, approach some higher gain sounds reasonably well. Everything in this amp (reverb, gain channel, mid fat switch, chorus, presence, limiter, hphone jack) is useful---rare among amps. If you only have 1 amp, and need to play at bedroom levels, try this amp now.
For the price, this amp beats everything I tried. Richer than the other comparable Fender solid state amps (Princeton 65, Deluxe 90) which sounded a bit thin and trebly, with no way to back that sound off.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use a 3 pickup Tele (gets Strat sounds too), trad Tele and a Gibson ES-135. Sounds real good with the Tele on clean and distorted settings. Clean-wise, can sound like a Deluxe/Bassman combo. The Gibson sounds better via the gain channel (between 2-4)as it has P90s and is naturally a raw guitar (edgy rockabilly and old Clapton Gibson era lead sounds work here).
Clean channel starts to break up around 6 with stock speakers (I replaced them; see below), never getting too grainy or crunchy, though.
NOTE: I max the treb/mid/bass at 10 for everything. The amp really changes if you do this. It gets more thump without tubbiness and stays shimmery without ear-splitting high-end. Do this first, then back off if you need to.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Seems to be quite dependable. No glitches, other than having to tighten the speaker screws upon unboxing it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A; no problems at all. Not a whimper. Thats the upside of solid state.It's as dependable as your stereo.
Overall Rating
:
10
Excellent home amp; highly recommended for those of us trying to get big sounds at lower volumes. The best thing I can say about this amp is that it sounds good every time I turn it on, at any setting, any guitar, any pickup selection. What it is not---a warm jazz amp, metal amp. Other than that---excellent. NOTE: I replaced the stock speakers (good actually; but a bit thin) with Jensen P10Rs. Big difference. Wow. Do it; it now emulates a trad Fender (~ Bassman) type sound much better. The gain warms up, too, removing some of the inherent graininess of solidstate gain. It does require resetting the EQ, though, and will breakup quicker.
NOTE: There is a new Princeton Chorus DSP amp out there now; don't assume that it is an improvement on this amp. I tried both and preferred this one.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: Gift (about $475?)
Submitted 02/03/2002
at 12:32am
by Dain
Email: one_nut_wonder at hotmail<dot>com
Features
:
9
I got the PC in 95. As a young beginner this amp was the world. and as im older it has held up through the years and miles nicely. This is the lil amo that could. Ive had many a musician ask "What are ya gonna do with that?!" -then i turn it up.. it cranks up there.
Agreed with the past reviews that the second channel is pretty useless as a distortion (i simply use a Boss Metal Zone for my crunch) the chorus is VERY good for the rig that it's on; as is the reverb.. works well with my strat for heavy surf/cowpunk and backed off, allows for a nice echo fill. Twin inputs; effects loop jacks; headphone; the limiter and gain of second channel a little weak.--eh use a pedal.
Sound Quality
:
9
My Traditionial setup is a Strat with Boss pedals in-line .. (metal zone or a digital delay reverb .. for those pink floyd/dead kennedys moments. The amp provides a reliable sound that is Fender. i dont normally put the main channel over '6' and it provides clean tones ; and using the boss pedal distorts nicely - since the provided footswitch does pop when hit. the second channel with all that gain presence limiter midboost crap is um lame .. its good to use for a quick moment to noodle with something but if youre really playin i wouldnt use the on board overdrive. and heheh kick ass REVERB ... word.
Reliability
:
10
I have had my PC since 1995. so thats a good 7 years. and it has NEVER failed me. I have used it extensively as my unit since then and put it though some heavy road use. it holds up the speakers arent blown and the body is doin ok. i havent had anything smoke blow up or fall off. its even been puked on and had beer dumped on it and hey lil guy came through every time.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Came with Warranty.
Never needed any additional support.
Overall Rating
:
10
This again is an amp best suited as the at home unit-- but dont let its size fool you. this thing can rock and hold up to most anything you toss at it. Granted i am looking to finally buy a little larger tube unit now ; but id never give up the PC.. Loyal, hard working, strong, and you can kick the crap out of it and it still loves ya at the end of the night.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $269.99 used
Submitted 01/16/2002
at 09:10pm
by matt dennewitz
Email: matt at solscape<dot>com
Features
:
9
what hasnt been said.. 2x25w speakers, incredible chorus, mono and stereo effects loop, two inputs (yay) overdrive channel, clean channel.. its a real piece of work..
Sound Quality
:
10
i run my fender sunburst standard tele through this beast and absolutely love what i get back.. there is a bit of a noise problem, but nothing a solvent into the pots and a nice cleaning couldnt solve.. the overdrive is thin and trebely, which can be a bit bothersome, but the reverb is wonderful and the chorus is just perfect.. as mentioned earlier, the reverb chamber could have been a litle bit bigger, but im not going to complain :)
Reliability
:
8
just got it, seems like it spent a year collecting debris in some starrving artist's garage, yet works pretty well..
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
no idea
Overall Rating
:
9
this amp is great for practicing in a practice space, and i cant wait to start gigging with it -- it really seems like a great amp.. i must say that i am very, very satisfied thus far with my purchase and would definitely recommend this all around..
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $375
Submitted 01/11/2002
at 01:37am
by PATRICK
Email: none
Features
:
10
I bought it new in 2001. I play along the lines of texas roadhouse rock. It has a good sweet clean for an SS amp. I use the amp with a Boss BD-2 Blues Driver, and for more sizzle styles, a Boss SD-1 Super Overdrive. At low vol's the pedals suck the bass, once the amp volume gets back up to 3 or so, the bass comes back. I neglected the Gain channel for months. Now that I actually sat down and really worked with it, it's not that bad for my use. It seems "3" is too low for gain, and "4" is too muddy. The only useable gain tones I've found are between these, with the limiter on "2", the Presence maxed on "10". It's not a true two-channel amp, but has two inputs, and seperate vols for the gain and clean. The second input is good for running a drum machine or some other active source. What made me buy and want to keep this amp, regardless of any I get in the future, are the features. It has an all-important headphone jack, two effects loops (pre and stereo post amp) that can be used for recording pre and stereopost as well, two inputs, footswitch (came with), and a full-sounding quality chorus with shimmer rate. It's a good little workhorse that allows for experimentation like a practice amp should. If I were it's engineer I would have added something like an external cab jack and a another type of reverb (plate and hall both).
Sound Quality
:
9
I use the guitar with a DeArmond LP/guild style with Goldtone PU's. I feel the clean comes across great with these. Not the gain channel. I think the gain would work better with singles, as Fender seems to be oriented towards the single-coil school of thought. It is the perfect amp for my enclosed environment. I must rely on headphones to play most of the time and Sony Studio Monitor MD series go great with this amp. I don't run it through the speakers that loud, but from what I've heard up to 3 or 4 on the volume, it sounds really Fender sweet, after that I couldn't say what it may sound like. I would say this amp is versatile, not in itself, no. But versatile in that it can get along with so many pedal types and effects units. I've ran wah pedals, delays, phasers, and things like acoustic simulators (sounded good!) and was pleasantly surprised at what the amp did with the sound. As for it's own distortion, anything above "4" on the gain and it's just way too muddy. All highs are lost in a muck of honk, made worse with the chorus on, made horrendous with the little white "mid-boost" button activated. Below that though and your sounding pretty clear don't forget. I give it a higher rating in this catagory only for the sweet clean, and what effects that clean does handle well. Seperately I give the gain channel a 4
Reliability
:
10
Now this is a practice amp, gigable only in sub-club settings, but I would rely on it to play a coffee house, no problem. No crackles, mine doesn't aformentioned "pop" when footswitching (?), it's quite. No tubes, so it can be flicked on and off all day without worry. True, it's not a classic Fender on the inside, but on the outside it's built like a tank. Much better than a Marshall of the same calibre. It has steel corner protection caps that are screwed in, not rivited, a steel logo that's screwed in, not plastic, and everything else is screwed or bolted on as well. No rivits. Everything is removeable and replaceable. This amp will be with me in years down the road, no worries, money well spent.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I've never dealt with Fender. Never had to, and cannot offer an opinion on it. It does have a 5 year fully transferable warranty.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've only been practicing hard for the last year, but have had several guitars in the past with small-type miniamps. I run five Boss pedals using my DeArmond M-77, quality cables, Radio shack AC adapters for the boxes, Sony Monitor Headphones, a modest setup. What I love about this amp is the verstility and all the inputs and outputs it offers, and that although not a pricey Fender, just as much construction quality went into it, it's solid. What I don't like is Fender's concept of what gain should sound like. If people want gain, they want gain. I wish it had a stronger, more defined, noise free gain. I did compare it to others in it's class; the Ibanez C225 (lousy), a Marshall Valvestate 50 watt, a Fender Princeton Chorus-DSP (doesn't have a headphone jack), others. I fealt this was the best value and quality. If it was lost or stolen, I would have to buy another in that it has features that are very neccessary to me. This is a great first amp/ apartment amp/ bedroom amp/ two guitars jamming amp/ coffee house amp/ beginner recording amp. I'd say best in this catagory, solid state type, and size.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $550$ New
Submitted 12/30/2001
at 11:21pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
I think the amp was made in 98, but I got it new in 99. I've been to many other guitar stores since I bought it and I think they might have stopped its production becuase I havent seen one in about 2 years. So it makes me glad that I got it...
Sound Quality
:
10
I play thrash/speed metal (Metallica-Megadeth type...). Truthfully I dont use any of the distortion or the chorus effects on it. I use the basic settings (bass,treble...) and leave all the effects to my pedals. The distortion it comes with is a little weak. If you put to much then it becomes to muddy,but if you put to little then its not enough. It works great with any pedals or effects processors and has two separte effects loops and a headphone jack that sounds great with a good pair of headphones. It's mainly made to be played at home or in small venues. The sound at high volume depends all on your gear.
For instance, I had sinle coil pickups, and at high vloume the sound was pop-e and a little distorted on clean. With the distortion it was the same thing, but only about 1/3 as bad. Also, I would get eardrum exploding feedback with the distortion. Like I said though it all depends on your gear because as soon as I got Emg-81's and a Boss Gt-3 effects processor that all stopped. Plus the sound was about 50% better after. I've had different friends... people listen to it and they say the sound is great, whether I've played for someone that doesnt know anything about guitar or one of my fellow musicians. The sound is excellent and is honestly the best 2x10 combo I've ever heard.
Reliability
:
10
I've had it for three years and it hasnt given me any problems.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I wouldnt know, I've never had to call them.
Overall Rating
:
10
This is an amp I will use for the rest of my life at home if it makes it. If it were ever lost or stolen I'd replace it if I could find one,
but u know what they say, "you can never replace an original."
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $275
Submitted 12/13/2001
at 04:04am
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
New in '98. Lots of print on the features so I won't bore you with that.
Sound Quality
:
10
I play anything from chicken-pickin' to metal, blues, jazz, classic rock, and somewhere amongst all those knobs I can find a decent setting for every one of those styles. It's a very versatile amp, and quite a lot of fun to play with. Spend some time with it, experiment with all the various features, and you'll surprise the heck out of yourself. One thing to keep in mind when you evaluate the sounds you get from this amp; it's not classic Fender tube amp, not a high-gain Marshall stack, not a Mesa Heartbreaker. But, you can get sounds that are similar and work well in settings where you would use those other tools, if you take the time to learn the Princeton's nuances. It's all there waiting for you to discover.
It's not really loud enough to play out, IMHO, unless you mic it. But, in the interest of neighbor-relations, it gets a lot more play time than any of my tube amps. I give it a ten for sound even though it doesn't have a lot of horsepower, because it sounds fantastic for an amp in its class. Oh, and if you use good studio-quality headphones you get a very accurate representation of the amp's sound via the headphone jack. Cheap walkman-type phones can't handle the dynamics, but a good quality set works very well. Apartment dwellers listen up!
A couple of negatives... There is a loud pop when you switch channels with the footswitch. Tried several, and it just won't go away. Also, the low end gets gas when you play at high volumes. I think it's just the nature of these 10-inch speakers to fart out if you crank up the bass.
Reliability
:
10
Played an hour or more almost daily for the last 3 years without a problem.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to use it.
Overall Rating
:
10
Been playing since '68. Played a lot of vintage stuff when it wasn't vintage. Overall, I really enjoy this amp for home use, practice, and even gigging in a small venue. I would definitely buy it again if it were lost. I compared it to Marshall, Crate, and Line 6 amps of the same caliber, and this one was the best value for an amp of this design.
Another plus for this aging rocker is that you can tote it without breaking your back. And, it fits in a Miata, so you don't have to have a truck to haul it around.
If you're considering buying one of these jewels to use for its intended purpose, get of the fence and do it. I don't think you'll regret it a bit.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $599 I think.
Submitted 11/24/2001
at 12:57am
by Anonymous
Features
:
9
Well this thing isn't at all limited if you think about what it is(a CHORUS AMP). It's exactly what it's suppose to be, so right on!
Sound Quality
:
10
The sound is SWEET in my opinion. I ran a clean Epi Dot(not so great) guitar through it, and it just blew me away. I had never heard sound like it before! And the overdrive channal is amazing! FORGET A DISTORTION PEDAL, that overdrive is awesome.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Well I haven't used it long, so I'm not really sure. It seems solid enough.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to deal with them.
Overall Rating
:
10
It's pretty sweet. I might buy it again if I lost it, but then again I'm not positive. I know for sure I'd miss it.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US gift
Submitted 11/18/2001
at 07:10am
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
You know the features...
Sound Quality
:
10
I tried out MANY amps and it took me about a month to find which amp was the best. And some how I always go to this one. I heard in other reviews that this amp doesn't have enough distortion. Well what you need to do to fix that problem is to buy a distortion pedal that you like. I personly like the distortion. And the clean channel is the best! The built in chorus is ok, but I am not too crazy about it.
Reliability
:
10
It's a fender!
Customer Support
:
5
Website isn't very helpful...
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing for 3+ years and this has been my favorite amp that I ever tried out. But this amp has fits your type of music,so try it out and mess with the dials. It took me over a month until I found which sound what I liked. If this amp was lost or stolen, I would try out different amps to see if I am missing out on something. If not, I would buy it again in a heart beat.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $250 used
Submitted 11/09/2001
at 05:18pm
by GT
Email: teelglt at aol<dot>com
Features
:
9
I bought this amp about 6 years ago, and it was well-used, but clean.
The princeton is the 1st solid state guitar amp I've bought, and find it hard to believe that it compares so favorably with my old tube Fenders and weighs half as much! It is one of the American-made ones, (I notice that they're made in Mexico now, not that it makes a lot of difference to performance). I would not part with it, that is unless I can trade the Princeton for his big brother, the Ultimate Chorus DSP.
Sound Quality
:
9
I play a variety of guitars; the Princeton seems to like them all and especially suits sweet & clean work.
Reliability
:
10
I've used Fender amps all my life; they never need repairs except when I blow a speaker.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
Nothing beats Fender amps
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $450
Submitted 10/30/2001
at 01:01pm
by MJ
Email: mklland<at>cs dot com
Features
:
9
This will be short and sweet since I recently traded it in.
But... It's a great amp!
Bought in 99 new from Mars. NICE sounding amp. 2 switchable channels,
Beeeeutiful built in Chorus. (also switchable)
AND MOST IMPORTANTLY... A Limiter Control. Its not on enough amps these days. I t helps give a creamy smooth blues distortion. Not Necesarily SRV tone. Different but nice.
Sound Quality
:
9
Played Strats, Wolfies, and Les Pauls through it.
A little noisy on the hi-gain settings. Great clean chanel.
Works for all types of rock, blues, and yes probably country too.
Here's the deal... I traded this away for more power. (A Laney TF 320)
I would have loved to have kept it as a practice amp but I got too good of a deal trade value on it. IT DOES NOT HAVE ENOUGH POWER TO GIG, in my opinion! 10" speakers and 40 watts (20 per chanel)
Thats the only reason I got rid of it.
HEY FENDER! Make a 100+ watt version of this w/(2)12"Celestions and I'll buy it in a heartbeat.
Reliability
:
10
No problems!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Dunno!
Overall Rating
:
8
I've been playing for 18 yrs. I really dug this amp. If your looking to buy a quality practice amp... get this one!
I'm knocking points off because it farts out at loud volumes. But its not really the amps fault, the speakers cant hack it loud.
I would buy it again if I had the dough for a practice amp only.
The most useful features of this amp are the Chorus and the Limiter control.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $325 used
Submitted 10/27/2001
at 03:54pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
'94 model 125 watts(must of gotten lucky)solid state 2x12 combo effects loop only works on clean channel.make sure get a foot switch if you plan on switching channels alot.2 eminence design speakers.LOUD
practice amp.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use this with mostly a strat,I have stock pickups,and it took me over two months to get the distortion right.But if you hate the distortion at first,don't gripe,skrew around with it.I finally decided to change the hight of my pickups,and belive it or not,it really sounds great now!!!I play through the middle pickup alot thats
really close to the strings,put the volume at middle setting or lower,treble:10 mid:7 bass:10 gain:6.5 limiter:1.5 volume:1 or above depending on the situation rate:0 depth:10.Its always at those settings,except for the reverb I put at different settings.It sounds like Incubus and the foo fighters at higher volume on the guitar distorted,and oasis and led zeppilin and SRV at lower volume settings,real tube amp-ish.My effects:Dunlop rotovibe,dan-echo delay,
boss DS-2(don't use anymore),Danelectro flange,boss noise surpressor, and an ibanez phaser.I'm a incubus FREAK!I use alot of volume swells and stuff with the phaser and rotovibe,this amp makes me sound exactly like what I want without having to spend over $1000 on a Mesa/Boogie.
Reliability
:
10
I'm in a band and has never acted strangely at all,and I bought it used!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
It is a great amp,even if I go on to stardom,you'll always spot this on stage with me,even if I own a plethora of tube amps,it'll be up there with 'em.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: trade
Submitted 10/23/2001
at 03:03pm
by J Gibbs
Email: jimmy<dot>gibbs at kattmail<dot>com
Features
:
6
Footswitchable channel & chorus, effects loop, hi and low imputs, headphone jack. Decent eq on clean side but no separate eq for distortion. Distortion has a limiter and presence control. The reverb on my amp doesn't seem to work, just adds more treble it seems. The chorus is very nice sounding with rate and depth controls
Sound Quality
:
7
I have a Jackson USA DK-1 w/Seymour Duncan JB4 humbucker and two single coils, a Fender USA HM-Strat with a Bill Lawrence humbucker and two single coils and occassionaly I play my Alvarez DY-56 acoustic/electric through the amp.
I play very few covers and mostly all original punk/metal/country. Mostly I record at home and don't play live much but the amp does pretty good in even pretty big clubs and what it lacks can be made up with PA compensation.
The amp sounds great in clean mode and even better with a little bluesy grit but starts crapping out the more you crank the gain.
If you're into country and blues this is an excellent amp. Metalheads would be dissapointed, HOWEVER, I can get some truly brutal sounds by running my BOSS ME-30 through the distortion side with the gain set to about 2 or 3. It's a way better sound than running the effects unit through the clean side and makes the Fender distortion by itself hide in shame.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
No problems except for the reverb...not a big deal for me since I'm using an effects processor in front of it but kind of annoying anyway.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Who knows?
Overall Rating
:
7
I've been playing about 6 years. Other gear I own are the guitars and effects processor I mentioned of course but I also own an Ibanez GSR200 bass and small Crate BX-15 practice amp, a Yamaha MT-400 multi-track, some assorted stompboxes and a Zoom RhythmTrack123 drum machine.
I like the amp overall because it has a huge amount of tonal combinations especially when a stompbox or processor is placed in front of it, I've never had a better sounding or more wicked sounding amp otherwise but as a stand alone amp I would have to say it doesn't quite cut it for my musical style because of it's pitiful distortion. I love it with the processor in front of it or by itself when playing clean or a little dirty...it would be nice I guess to have a stand alone amp that could do all that without having to add extra effects but for what I've got in this amp it's been worth it.
Before this amp I had several different Crate Blue Voodoos (1x12 & 2x12 also) but they had to be really cranked to get a good sound plus they were too bulky. I moved to a Crate GX140C which is a solid state so was lighter and better at lower volumes but I just wasn't impressed with the overall sound and it was a huge amp too. I wanted a smaller amp so traded the GX140C straight across for this one. It's great at almost all volume levels plus it's very portable.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $450
Submitted 08/04/2001
at 11:43pm
by E.
Features
:
6
Fender Princeton Chorus. 2 speakers, delivering 25 watts each.
Clean, Reverb, Chorus, Overdrive. Also a "limiter" thingy. Comes with footswitch to click on/off Overdrive and Chorus. It has enough features for a 50 watt combo.
It may say overdrive, but there really is none to speak of.
It came with a free "Fender" sticker.
Sound Quality
:
5
This amp has a good clean tone. Nice, echoey reverb, and fairly smooth, deep chorus. Awful distortion. Buzzes at mid-high volumes, can't keep up in band practices. It may sound decent in your room with the volume at '1', but turn it to 5-6 with your band, and it craps out. I started out using it with an inexpensive Epiphone LP and Boss MT-2, and the whole setup got weak in the knees at jam sessions. Don't expect to approach any kind of metal tone with this thing. This amp is for playing clean. I plan on using it as my clean amp, now that I have a Marshall JCM 900.
I give it a 7.5 for the clean, and a 2 for the distortion.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I've never gigged with it. Never broke down on me either. It's solid, but then again, I haven't road tested it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No comment.
Overall Rating
:
5
I've been hacking away for about 2 years. This was my first 'big' amp-I started out with a crap 15 watt Peavey I got for free. I got the Princeton Chorus a year ago, and back then, it served its purpose. I've since upgraded. I am into heavy, brutal guitar sounds, and this amp does not make the grade. However, when I am possessed to play clean, it does the job. If you play the blues, or anything like that, try it out next time you are at Sam Ash. If you want metal look elsewhere.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $390 used
Submitted 08/03/2001
at 06:37pm
by JOHN DOE
Features
:
10
This amp is awsome to start off with. It has Two tens, 65 watts of power, two channels, reverb, chorus and an awsome effects loop. Th is thing is extremely versitile. Dont know why all my other amps cant be this versitile, you can play any thing from blues to death metal, jazz to county on this thing. It has the best clean ive ever heard.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use a strat and a les paul. and both these guitars are great with it. it has an articulat sound to it. the eq is exremely responcive and you can use any effect you want but none are needed to help the tone of this one out. it carries its own weight and for being a 2x10 combo at 65 watts i make my drummer mad on a constant basis. no drawbacks here.
Reliability
:
10
Been here and there with it, giged with it and still holds up fine after 7 years of my abuse to it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
not done yet.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
This is awsome and if were stolen i would have to hunt them down and well... you can finish the rest.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: US $250 used
Submitted 07/26/2001
at 10:22am
by Adam
Features
:
4
Alright, so it's your basic two channel fender model. Emphasis on basic. First off, the clean channel has a decent EQ, but what about the distortion channel (which i'll get to). the abilities of this amp are very very limited. However, it does have a nice effects loop and the chorus aint bad, that saves it from a lower score. Overall, the features of this amp leave a lot to be desired. It is most certainly not versatile enough for my tastes, I play different styles, from Classical guitar to classic rock to jazz or blues.... but, my focus is on Black, Death, and Doom metal. and this amp doesnt even come close to sufficing. I've had it for 5 years, and am continuously let down. I use at home only, and only only only with a multifx processor (DOD Tec4x) for distortion and effects reasons, the clean tone on it is good enough to get by.
Sound Quality
:
4
I have a few guitars, main being a Gibson Les Paul Studio Gothic with 490s, and a ESP M3, a BC Rich warlock, and Ibanez RG, an ESP Horizon, a Squier (i never sell or get rid of any guitars), and some others (acoustics and whatnot). The clean tone with the LP is good, but here comes my biggest gripe. THE DISTORTION CHANNEL ON THIS THING IS ABSOLUTELY HORRENDOUS. PITIFUL, DISGUSTING, REVOLTING, EMBARASSING, AND UTTERLY LAUGHABLE. IT SUCKS, SUCKS SUCKS SUCKS SUCKS SUCKS. okay, why does it suck you ask? becaue it has no substance to it at all, to get any sort of tone out of it you have to crank gain all the way up, presence to +5, limiter to zero, and volume to like 3, which is MUCH louder than the clean channel ever gets and has such a horrible humming feedback. its REALLY shameful. and no EQ. basically, DO NOT BUY THIS AMP if you are planning on using it for distortion. All of my guitars put together cant make this amp sound pretty on that channel. Stay away from it, or your health will suffer. The clean channel is nice, throw on revered and/or chorus to your own tastes, slap on the neck pickup on an LP, and its got a nice tone, which brings the overall sound up from a 1. With a pedal, you might get some sort of manageable tone by distorting the clean channel and using its EQ, thats what i have done at least.
Reliability
:
5
I've had problems with it. Pushed it too hard and blew some crap out inside, doesnt work as well, but other than dying and sputtering now and then, it has lasted 5+ years fairly well.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with them
Overall Rating
:
4
It was my first decent amp, and i've owned others, current one is a Crate halfstack, which is not gonna do it for me much longer, gonna be buying a Peavey 5150, a Laney GH50L, a Hughes & Kettner Vortex, and a modeling amp of some sort, all in the next year, since i'm sick of getting new guitars, time for a few new amps. If it were lost or stolen, i would NOT buy another one. I wish it had better sound and features. Basically, buy this amp is you play clean stuff or if you have a decent pedal and you need a POS amp for home and dont wanna spend more than a couple hundred bucks. Otherwise, avoid it.
Product: Fender Princeton Chorus
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 06/14/2001
at 11:21am
by Greg
Features
:
8
My PC is a red knob version from the late 80's (probably). The features follow: 2-10" Fender 'Special Design' (Eminence) speakers, 2x25 watt stereo amps, hi (regular guitars) and low inputs (for guitars with preamps), stereo/mono effects loop on front of amp, reverb, clean channel, overdrive channel - each channel has it's own set of EQ controls, 38 lbs, black tolex, reverb, chorus, solid state everything. This amp has just enough to keep you from being confused and allow you to dial in good tone instantly without constant tweaking. As such, I rate the simplicity a solid "10". As for versatility due to features? I dunno. The amp can do country, rock, blues, and jazz, so I'll gice it an "8" for versatility.
Sound Quality
:
10
I mostly use archtops - two with humbuckers and a 60's one with a single coil. I have also used my Squire Strat with stock single coils
with this amp.
I (try to) play mostly jazz with my PC, but do play rock and blues some. For what I play and at the level I play (hobbyist), this amp is tops.
For clean jazz, my archtops sound rich and warm thorugh the PC. Through other amps like my ex-Polytone, ex-Fender Acoustasonic Pro, ex-Crate VC5212, ex-Fender Ultimate Chorus, and the like, my archtops always sounded too bright, too sterile, not distinct enough, or something that made me regret playing through those amps.
For blues and rock, the PC's overdrive is not as nice as say my ex-Crate VC5212 (which also had better sounding reverb), but is plenty good enough for me, considering how little I use overdrive in the overall scheme of my playing.
The reverb on the PC is OK. I think a larger tank would make a world of difference. As it is, I don't turn past 3 or 4, else it sounds somewhat tin-cannish. So, at 3-4, the reverb adds just the right amount of dimension to the tone.
The chrous is excellent - better than my ex-Fender Ultimate Chorus amp. The chorus thickens the sound like it should on the PC; it doesn't overwhelm or obscure the sound like it does on other amps with chorus. The only other amp that had as nice of chorus was my ex-Fender Acousasonic Junior (even my ex-Fender Acoustasonic Pro or ex-Fender Ultimate Chorus did not have as nice of chorus as the PC).
The clean sounds of this amp in combination with the on-board chorus are perfect for jazz - thick, rich, and warm!
The PC's overdrive sounds are very guitar dependent, sounding better wiht my Squire Strat than with my humbukcer-equipped archtops. In fact, I was able to get very convincing early Santana tone out of the PC and my Strat - you know, long sustain, singing distortion. You won't find death metal distortion in this amp - thankfully - but you will find good blues to hard rock distortion.
The amp is not noisy at all; no humming , mechanical buzzing or anything to detract from the tone.
For what I play, this amp beats 'em all and believe me folks, I've only listed a few of the many amps I've gone through in the past 2 years in search of something that sounds good for lower volume jaz and ocassional rokc and blues.
Reliability
:
10
Let's see, the amp is about 12 years old, looks NM cosmetically, had it checked over by a tech for $35 and got a complete clean bill of health, never fails, always sounds good... hmm, anything less than a '10' would be lying...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I have dealt with Fender in the past with other amps, but not with the PC. In all cases, Fender has been helpful, but to be honest, I've not asked all that much from them.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing aobut 10 years, though the number of songs I know would indicate a much shorter period of time. I own 3 archtops, a fender Super 60 tube amp, a 60's Hohner tube amp,and a couple of single coilg solid bodies. Over the past two years, I have owned no less than 30 guitars and amps as I search for keepers. The PC is one such keeper.
I really like the fact that the amp is a Fender. It is also lightweight (38lbs). But it's the tone I really love.
There is nothing to hate about this amp. Heck, even an acoustic/electric sounds good through this amp! The amp is very versatile in what it can handle any guitar - a/e, huimbuckers, and single coils.
If it was lost/stolen, I'd buy another one. I don't think I'd go with the new DSP models though as I prefer analog reverb and chorus to digital substitutes, having ahd Fender DSP stuff in my ex-Fender Acoustasonic Pro.
I am rating the PC as a "Fantastic value", but I would not want to spend $500 on a new one.So, my "10" rating is really based on the capabilities of the amp, assuming that you don't overpay. Even so, I've had amps cositng twice as much that weren't half as good.
|
Page:
1 2
(Show 10 | 25 | 50 | 100 reviews per page)
|
Showing 1 -
100
of 180 reviews
|
|