Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $450
Submitted 02/08/2004
at 09:33am
by Mattowarrior
Features
:5
It has all the stuff I need. I have a G Major I use for Reverb, delay, spacey shit, etc. I also have a Crybaby wah, a Sovtek Phaser Shifter, Dod Delay, and a Vamp and a Marshall Mg 15 watt. I play atmospheric prog metal, blues VH metal, hard rock, punk, death/black metal, etc. It is very versatile for most styles. 120 watts can blow your fuckin head off! Kick ass 120 watts pure tube tone!
Sound Quality
:10
Jackson Dx2 Dinky Reverse with an Evolution at the bridge, Air Norton at the Neck, Olp MM1, King V with SD Jazz and JB. I also use a Carvin 2x12 (open back) that I'm going to make a back for later in the week. As well as me using a Crybaby wah and a tc G Major thats about it.
The essence of the 5150 I have figured out today and will reveal the secrets to all those who would like to know. The Rhythm channel is voiced like early 80's Marshalls, and the lead channel is (alot like) Soldano Slo100's. I have an idea in my mind that Eddie wanted to put the best of the Marshall sound into the Rhythm channel (hence not a real "clean" channel) and the Slo sound in the lead channel for one convienient package (and a lot more inexpensive than both). The Peavey company made it so that Eddie's preferred sounds are in this package without having to switch amps, etc. Does it succeed? In a way its not as good as the originals (JCM 800 or SLO) but this amp is about more of a bang for the buck quality. I have also heard conflicting reports about the similarity between this and the SLO.
Either way, the 5150 is a kick ass rock/metal amp, and can be more versatile with the right setup and eq settings. It cuts like no other modern high gain amp I've heard (and the hi mids dont hurt that either) and it has a very pleasant articulation, resonance, as well as sustain.
Reliability
:7
Reliabilty depends on whether you consider PC board constructed amps reliable or not. It is a simple two channel amp with an effects loop so it cannot be too bad. However, some of the tubes being mounted to the Pc board is definitely a cost cutting measure. I haven't heard about Peaveys blowing out on people too often (like some of the current Marshalls, etc) however.
Customer Support
:10
They have an excellent website forum in which one can get in touch with an amp tech in real time (James Brown and other Peavey reps always post there). Even though I haven't had any other support experience other than online, if its anything like the online support, it must be second to none.
Overall Rating
:10
It is my amp, tone, that I am. I own the 5150 amplifier, and it serves all of my needs.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $500 used
Submitted 01/26/2004
at 01:35am
by Vinny Slaylots
Features
:10
You all know the features of this amp or you wouldn't be here. Mine is a 1993 "signature" model 5150.
"If it's good enough for Eddie, it's good enough for me"
Sound Quality
:10
This amp absolutely DESTROYS and Mesa, Marshall, Crate etc. etc. I love the hot metal distortion that spews forth from my Sheffield speakers and slays any Limp-Bizkit shirt wearing f@ggot crossing the street.
I have many guitars, main axe is a crackle-finish Charvel Predator with Bill lawrence rail pickups. I can play anything from sparkling clean on the single rail in the neck to Slayer on my bridge humbucker. WAR ENSEMBLE!
Some people whine about the clean channel. Personally I think a Peavey clean is very underrated, learn how to EQ and amp like previous reviewers have said. Understand the 5150's quirks and you can achieve most any tone imaginable, however only few can touch the tones that this amp can.
Bottom line is if you want Leo Fender clean, BUY A DUAL REVERB! Duh!
Reliability
:10
Anyone who has owned a Peavey in the past knows about their reliability. Being the owner of a Butcher, Decade and Stereo Chorus 212, I most certainly can attest to Peavey's quality craftmanship. It says 'Designed and Built in the U.S.A.' for a reason guys.
I personally think that if the Berlin Wall was built with Peavey 5150's, those human rights sheep would have never tore it down. In fact, they all would have been obliterated by its pure 'slut-banging metal' volume, and cowered at the very glance of its might.
Customer Support
:10
Peavey is THE BEST in customer support!!! Bar none! Once I needed a lost fuse holder for a gig, and they overnighted it to me free of charge!!! Parts are shipped quickly, people are great, fabulous southern accents too :)
Ever tried to get customer service from Marshall??? I mean Korg USA?
You haven't. They sell amps on their name, not their reliability, customer service and most of all TONE! BUY AMPS WITH YOUR EARS, NOT YOUR EYES!
Overall Rating
:10
The best amp I have ever played, period. I own lots of Peavey gear, some is stated above, all has yet to dissapoint. This amp will never be stolen from me because when the stupid bastard struggles to run out the door with my heavy-ass 5150, he will be shot, then his bloody corpse beaten to a pulp with my amp, only to leave the bloodstains on the amp to make it sound more 'evil'. If this was your Mommy's Line6, he most certainly would have escaped, or if I did in fact shoot the idiot, the amp would instantaneously break upon impact with his forehead. So thusly, it will be mine always.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: CAN (650) used
Submitted 01/22/2004
at 12:13pm
by Anonymous
Features
:4
Versitile this amp is not, no reverb, the clean channel is lacking and the rythm and lead channels share EQ.
Sound Quality
:9
Right now Iam using a Jackson dkmgt with a emg 81 in the bridge.It has a fairly high/midrange sound to it naturally but with enough head room to get it to chunk along nice enough.Cuts through the mix in our Band, it works very well with our tuning (C).Lead notes sound glassy and bright, has way more than enough gain, putting it past 5 or 6 depending on youre tunning is too much.This amp slays for metal, it does that job better than anything ive tried so far,marshall jcm dsl/tsl, boogie dual/triple.
Reliability
:8
Havent had mine long enough to give a good overview but its heavy and built like a tank.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:9
I have been playing for around 12/ 13 years
I definaltey would seek another one if this were stolen
I love its bright solid metal tones, lots of head room for anything evil
I do wish it didn't have a fixed power cord
Basically for the money this thing is death spewing machine, it supports enough tone to handle much if not all of the heaviest shit out there ex impaled, cannibal corpse, vital remains, exhumed etc.
But for a wicked solo tone it rules!!
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $510
Submitted 01/05/2004
at 04:53pm
by Anonymous
Features
:8
This baby is about an early 90s model, the first version with the block letter "EVH" on it. Its got 2 channels, clean and lead, clean has a crunch switch, 3 band eq, resonance, and presence. No reverb but do you actually need it on this amp? Sounds fine without it.
Sound Quality
:9
This amp sounds beautiful, I just bought it used, it has old tubes in it, and it still rocks extremely hard. I have a gibson les paul studio. The lead channel is so saturated and great for metal, hardcore, stuff like that. The clean channel sounds great to me, if you are complaining about a shitty clean channel, learn how to EQ your sound to get it right. This comes close to the clean I get on my Mesa Boogie Mark IV. But again, absolutey love the lead channel. Getting new tubes in it in a day or so and I cannot wait to hear it then.
Reliability
:8
Its at least 10 years old, still looks good and works perfectly. Id say this baby was built to last. It is tube though..
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never dealt with.
Overall Rating
:9
Ive been playin about 4 years now, Im in a hardcore/metal/rock band, play shows every once in a while. I also own a Mesa Mark IV. The distortion on this blows the Mesa away. Not as diverse of sounds, but still great. I would buy another one of these in a second if this was stolen.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $400 used
Submitted 01/03/2004
at 03:29pm
by Justin P.
Features
:9
The features are pretty standard, and I'm sure you've read them over a thousand times by now, so I'll skip them. Other than that, this is an amazing amp. All the power you could ever need. The only thing that bothers me is havnig both channels share one EQ section.
Sound Quality
:10
I use a Gibson Les Paul with a JB/'59 combo in it, as well as a Fender American Strat w/Lace sensors. Both of these guitars sound absolutely killer through the 5150, and yet they still maintain they're individual characteristics. I play mostly hard rock, with a little metal and classic rock thrown in. The 5150 does excellent for all of them. The clean is definitely good enough for me- but I don't need a pristine, Fender type clean. The distortion is the strong point of this amp (obviously!). You can get all ranges of distortion, and each sounds great in it's own way.
Reliability
:10
I have never had a problem with this amp. I have gigged it multiple times, and I think that I would be comfortable with it without a backup. Just make sure you take care of the basics, and you should never have a problem with this head.
Customer Support
:10
Peavey customer support is excellent. Easy to deal with, friendly, and very helpful. I have never needed to get the head repaired.
Overall Rating
:10
Overall, this is an excellent amp. I have owned quite a few heads, and this one is definitely in the top 5. If you like distortion, the 5150 won't let you down.
If this were stolen, I would definitely invest in another.
Again, the only thing that I don't like is the single EQ section.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $450
Submitted 12/22/2003
at 07:37pm
by Mr Matty
Features
:6
Its good it has an Fx loop. Two Channels. No fx but who gives a shit!
Sound Quality
:9
It is the sound I have been searching for all my life. Now I need some pickups. However, the bass sounds a bit flabby but it may be my cab as well. I said a "bit" flabby.
Reliability
:10
How many old Crates do you find at Pawn shops that still work? Peavey has made some mediocre sounding stuff, but you can still see ALL OF IT AROUND. Any questions?
Customer Support
:10
Kick ass. Awesome website. Maybe not as good if you don't have a computer.
Overall Rating
:10
The guy from Enforsaken USED to play a 5150. Its really funny that he's bashing it, because the other guitarist from his band STILL PLAYS the 5150!
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 12/09/2003
at 10:18pm
by moon
Features
:7
you already know the features if you're reading this. the 5150II has all the features this one should except for reverb. too bad the 5150II doesn't sound the same.
Sound Quality
:9
i use an esp-ltd v-350 with a dimarzio dropsonic in the bridge and a dimarzio humbucker from hell in the neck, an ernie ball steve morse with stock pickups (dimarzio also), and a dillion 490a which is basicly a prs copy with two p-90s. i run a digitech xp-100, vox wah, and sabine pedal tuner in front of the amp. i run an ibanez soundtank super chorus, marshall supervibe, digitech x-series delay and reverb through the effects loop.this amp is loud! it has more bass than anyone should ever need. the low end seems to increase as you turn up the gain actually. there is also more gain than should be allowed by law. anything past 5 is too much. i really like the crunch feature on the rhythm channel. i think that the clean is better than people give it credit for. you have to actually use your pickup selector though. if you try to use your bridge pickup for clean sounds you can give it up. the clean sounds best with single coils. you have to rethink the way you set your knobs with this amp. when setting your amp up quit trying to put so much low end in your sound. that's what bass players are for.
Reliability
:No Opinion
other than standard retubing i don't forsee anything going wrong. i've never heard of anyone having any major problems with these.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $515 used
Submitted 12/02/2003
at 12:54pm
by john
Email: john_deleon11 at hotmail<dot>com
Features
:7
This is a review for the first run edition of this amp with the block "EVH" letters instead of the newer signature models. The features are pretty basic. I wish Peavey would have put this thing out with independent EQ for both channels in the first place. It would be cool if you could get a footswitch for it that would switch between clean and crunch also. I quess that's why there's a 5150II.
Sound Quality
:10
I'm using an Epiphone Les Paul Custom that has a Rio Grand BBQ in the bridge and a stock pickup in the neck. Strings are D'Addarios 13-56 tuned down a whole step. I run into a boss tu-2 tuner, a bad horsie wah, a Robert Keeley TS-9 tube screamer, a boss super chorus, a boss noise suppressor and then into the 5150. The head powers a Marshall JCM 900 1960B cab and a Crate 4x12 with celestion 50's.
The clean channel is not the best in the world but I like it alot for the style of music we do (metal/hardcore). I personally like a clean tone that has a little grit to it. It cleans up really nice if you roll back on the volume a bit. It takes a little tweaking but you can get a great clean out of it. The bright switch helps alot when you have to cut through the mix.
The crunch channel is very nice. You can get some some fat bluesey tones out of it easily. I was actually able to get a nice creamy vintage tone out of it that closely matched my friends Orange overdrive head. I mean it was really close! Having the tube screamer for this channel really compliments the sound. This channel is the TOOL zone. Very responsive with a nice bite and good dynamics. It really comes alive when you start messing with the volume on your guitar.
The lead channel is just a beast! This is secret holy grail of high gain amps! Don't let the "Peavey" logo fool you or keep you from giving this thing a try. This is pure molten metal and it's freaking loud too. You'll never have to turn the post past three or four. I have my pre-gain on 2.5 and that's plenty for me, if that tells you anything! I have the bass set to about 6 the mids at 5 and the highs on about 4.3. The resonance is set to 6 and the presence is down at about 3. This thing pumps out some of the punchiest, crunchiest, most bad ass distortion I've heard from an amp at this price. This will take you into the realm of 18visions, bleeding through, slayer, god forbid and can nail zakk wylde's lead tone without the need for an overdrive pedal! I'm telling you I'll put this up against a T-REC any day. It can be a bit loud at high volumes but the boss noise suppressor helps with that.
Now, I will suggest changing out the tubes. I've played through both the signature and the block letter models and they are indeed different sounding amps. The Block letter version has more raw power and thump but the signature is a little more versatile and manageable. Play both before you buy one, if you can. I'm using Chinese power tubes (Mesa 6l6GC STR 420's) and they really make the amp come alive. They clean up the sound and add a good deal of midrange punch and overall definition. Mesa doesn't offer the 420's anymore but they have the STR 427's. Ruby Tubes' 6l6gc is also a chinese tube. Look for the wings at the top of the plates. For preamp tubes use the Electro Harmonix 12AX7EH. These little guys are bad ass and will really warm the amp up. You only need three for the gain stages. V4 and V5 are for the effects loop and phase inverter respectively and won't affect your tone. The head is bad ass but the tubes you use will definately affect the tone. It's worth the money to experiment with different tubes.
Reliability
:10
These things are tanks. Before I bought my own I was playing through a friends that he's had for years. The one I have now is a first edition model with the block "EVH" I got from ebay and it sounds even better than my friends. These things were built to last. As long as the tubes stay fresh my head will be just fine.
Customer Support
:10
Peavey's customer support is incredible. When I was shopping around for amps I kept coming back to the 5150. Whenever I had questions I'd email their customer service. They'd always get back to me within a few days and were always very helpful. They actually recommended using the electro harmonix preamp tubes for me.
Overall Rating
:9
This amp is best you'll find for the money. Even at new prices they are a steal but you can find them on Ebay for as little as $450 in some cases. I'm currently saving to buy a second one. I love this amp. If you're thinking about getting one of these I'd do it quick before the prices start going up. This is quickly becoming one of the most often used amps in metal. My only complaints are in the features dept. but it's not really that big a deal. It'll blow the balls of a marshall or a boogie any day of the week. Every time I plug into it and turn it on I can't believe how good it sounds. I've never been able to say that about any other amp I've ever owned.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $600
Submitted 12/02/2003
at 06:08am
by Buck
Email: loudpipzsavelivz<at>aol dot com
Features
:8
In my opinion, the (original) 5150 head is for Marshall players who want a bit more flexibility in their sound (i.e. gain and EQ control).
The active bass (resonance) and presence controls really help define your sound a lot, and the dual channel arrangement is perfect for setting up a rhythmn sound, and then a separate (louder) lead sound.
I also really like the effects loop on this amp. In summary, the control panel is VERY basic, but it works well, and you can extract an amazing amount of subtleties from those knobs with a little tweeking!! Also, having the FX footswitchable from the floor is a great feature!
Sound Quality
:10
OK, first off, let me say I've owned a 5150 II -- and after using one for 2 weeks, I sold it. TOTAL CRAP!! I don't know what PV did to make a great thing suck, but they pulled it off. In short, *avoid* the 5150 II like the plague!
Secondly ... I prefer the block logo heads (that say "EVH" on them) over the script signature logo heads. They gain stage is a little beefier on the block logo heads, which are the original issue. A lot of people complained the heads had too much "hiss" in them, and the gain channels were too noisy? Well, I can tell you that this amp *can* be noisy if you do one of the following:
- improper ground
- put the transformer near another amp's tubes/transformer
- run the gain stages anywhere over 8
...otherwise, I've not had any complaints about any of my 5150 heads being hissy or noisy, and they are ALL the original issue/block logo models!
Disclaimer: Peavey ships the 5150 heads biased extremely cold (like running 12-15mA of plate voltage through the output section). This causes an extreme amount of crossover distortion to occur. This MAY be where these people are saying the noise in the gain comes from??
Myself, I have installed adjustable bias pots in ALL of my 5150 heads!
I'm running two of my heads at 40mA and two at 42mA ... they are much warmer sounding, "cleaner" sounding in the gain, and much quiter. Oh, they are also a lot more "fat" sounding than before. Basically, you need to have at least 30mA of voltage before you're out of crossover distortion on a 5150 head, so I would highly recommend this modification to anyone using one. Details on the mod and how it can be done are available here: http://www.eurotubes.com/euro-k.htm
Additionally, it should be noted I'm exclusively using JJ Electronics 6L6GC (#40 to #42 grade) in the output section and model ECC83S 12AX7 tubes in the preamp (also from JJ). They are the BEST tubes for a 5150 head!! I've tried em all -- Groove Tubes, EH, Sovtek -- JJ's are the best sounding tubes and really bring a dull sounding 5150 to life! Read more about the tubes I'm using: http://www.eurotubes.com/euro-e.htm
Reliability
:10
I've been playing 5150 heads since they came out in 1991. I now own (4) of them, and they all behave equally well. 12 years later, I've got nothing to complain about any of them!! Other than replacing output tubes (because I run them on the hot side, causing them more wear n tear than a normal 5150), I've not had to do anything to my heads...and trust me, they've been everywhere and taken a lot of bumps and roadie abuse. They definitely take a licking and keep on ticking!
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never had to deal with Peavey on them, so I do not have an opinion here.
Overall Rating
:9
I've been playing for 30 years. I've owned tons of Marshalls, as well as Fenders and a Boogie or two. For me and my work, the 5150s do a great job. Are they the end-all, be-all amp? NO! In fact, for my setup, I run a 5150 head in parallel with a Soldano SLO amp. I set the 5150 up to be my "gain" engine, as well as handle my effects.
I EQ it on the bassier side to get a very heavy sound, and I run it into 1/2 of a Peavey 4x12MS with Sheffield speakers (which get a great low end response).
Editor's note: The SLO feeds the other 1/2 of the cabinet and I EQ it on the bright side (tons of top end, presence). In essence, I'm running bi-amped. For small gigs, I split a stereo 4x12, for larger gigs, they both feed a separate 4x12, or in extreme cases, (2) 4x12 cabs for a total of two stacks.:
SLO aside, for a decade I used the 5150 head exclusively and was very, very happy with it. For such a basic layout, it has a LOT of sounds within it that can be coaxed out of it -- so it's best to play with it and find what you like.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $550 used
Submitted 11/27/2003
at 03:32pm
by Toolsound
Features
:6
Just got the 5150 a couple weeks ago...It's a pretty basic amp: 2 Channels, shared EQ, presence, and resonance. Pregain dials for both channels (this is your distortion level) as well as postgain dials (volume). It's also got a footswitch available for channel/effects (I haven't tried this though...Got my amp off ebay) and an effects loop...No headphone jack (like I care). It's not loaded with features, but it's got enough to keep me satisfied...I guess I could've asked for a master volume or something. You can get independent EQ's on the 5150 II, but the original series go for so cheap that I didn't mind having a shared one. I mainly use this amp at home right now...I might be gigging in the future, but that all depends. It's got 120 watts (WAYYYY more than I'll ever use at home, and still more than enough for most gigs anyway). The amp may lack in features, but hell...Who cares about features as long as you like your tone?
Sound Quality
:7
Right now I'm using a Genz Benz 2x12 cab and playing through my Ibanez S470 w/ EMG pickups. The Genz Benz is a great cab for this amp- crank the resonance up and the bass is just thundering- great headroom. The 5150 is already well known for its crunchy tones, but the EMG pups just enhance it even more...I love 'em. I play anything rock-oriented, but I espeically love death metal so this amp suits me perfectly (just look at all the metal bands that use this thing)! On the rhythem channel I can also get some good blues tones goin' on...It's actually a pretty versatile amp as far as the tone goes...Everyone complains about the clean channel on these things, but it's really not THAT bad- it's quite useable in fact. Besides, most audiences aren't going to notice if your clean tones aren't 100% sparkly/bouncy. If you really hate it that much, talk to JerryP on the HC amp forum...He can mod the preamp to a lower gain level and make the clean channel sound very clean and full while still retaining all the gain you'll need on the lead channel. I'd also recommend getting the bias mod for this amp (Jerry can do this too)...It's supposed to get rid of that nasty cross-over distortion and give you a more smooth, dynamic sound. This amp can get kinda noisy at high volume levels (not so much with my EMG pups though *wink*), but I usually play at low volumes anyway, so it doesn't really matter...You don't need to crank the amp to get a good sound either; I have my post gain on 1 or 2 and it sounds just as brutal as ever. Just hit a few power chords and you'll know what this amp was meant to do...Great rhythem, great lead...Eddie Van Halen uses this thing, so what does that tell ya?! I picked this thing up for $550, so to pay an extra $60 for the bias mod and $100 for Jerry's mod is still not that bad at all. No amp is perfect, so I'm not going to give this a 10, but don't get me wrong...I love this amp!!!
Reliability
:10
These things are built like tanks...I got mine used and it still looks like it's in near-mint condition! Never had to deal with Peavey yet, but there are plenty of people around who know how to work with the 5150, so I wouldn't worry about it much anyway.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Dunno...Never had to deal with them, and I'd be surprised if I ever did have to.
Overall Rating
:8
All the features you need, none you don't...Great sound (especially for you metal-heads)...Versatile, reliable...What more could you really want. Go try one of these amps out and see what you think!
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: FREE (Traded half my equipment for it used )
Submitted 11/20/2003
at 06:08pm
by Mattowarrior
Features
:6
Two channels- a somewhat decent clean/rhythm channel(depending on what you dial in eq wise) believe it or not and an ultra saturated gain lead channel.
A footswitch and an fx loop which is useful for me. No reverb, no extra features which would make the PCB construction even more cluttered than it should be, hence increasing unreliability. I hate amps with on board effects because the on board effects usually are flawed but it could use some reverb..
Sound Quality
:10
I'm playing it with a Jackson Dinky Reverse (stock Duncan Designed pups which suck I'm going to replace them soon) and will be playing it soon with my Jackson King V when its fixed (as you see I appreciate the Jackson Company at least when they were still Jackson) stock pups as well (better than the Duncan designed Pups). I use the 5150 thru a 2x12 Carvin cab with V30 clones ( Next step is getting a 4x12). I have a Crybaby Wah, a Zoom Gfx 707 which is at my buddy's house and he may buy it and I have some other pedals I haven't used with it yet. Used my ART Sgx with a lot of other shit to trade up for the 5150 so I'm without an effects processor but I'm likely getting one tommorow. So far so good though, beautiful singing distortion, overdrive, almost a "tingly" sustain. If this is what most Swedish melodic Death metal and other awesome metal bands use, this is the shiznit. I play progressive/Death/Thrash/Technical/Power/black metal, blues, psychedlic, neo classical, punk, etc.. The clean sound is more usable than I thought though a little bland. I'm sure it can be used for clean parts, after all, what the hell did they do in the days of one channel amps? Turn the volume knob down! There is a variety of eq voicings and different setups you can use with the 5150, I haven't used even 10 percent of it yet. It kicks ass thus far though. It is a mighty amp of mighty amps. A bit more loose than Marshall (which I'm sure can be adjusted with better tubes and bias as I just got the amp recently and havent done this), but the gain is to kill for. It kills, it shakes the whole apartment if I have it on 2 or 3. This amp is very mid heavy, so it can cut thru a mix well. It is very bright but not in a bad way (not overly trebly). This is my first "Real" amp. I had shitty equipment for years before and finally I have the real deal. My last amp was a Peavey Butcher which was kind of like my "WEBLOS" (for those of you who don't know boy scout lingo its the step between cub and regular boy scouts) badge into real amps/tube amps. It didn't have enough features and was a little too raw for my kind of metal (I did like it don't get me wrong) so I traded it and a bunch of other shit for a 5150. I've only been playing tube amps since August 2003. I had solid state shit before, but now I have one of the best for this price at least. Would love a Soldano but this 5150 is so kick ass I don't need it at this time. WHen I get 3000 dollars to spare maybe I will. Would like some Mesa stuff as well.
And oh yes, the tingle. The "tingle" is how I'd describe the distortion/sustain on this amp. It doesn't pick at your ears it tingles them. And its a nice sound actually. The amp is a little noisy, but I found out I had a lot of shitty cheap cables and when I switched I had less problems. When I get new pups I'm going to get them properly grounded and I may buy a noise gate and do the Bias mod as well (as long as I can go back to the original). Eddie puts his name to some kick ass shit! Oh and also, it sounds great even at low volumes! Something that can't be said of many amps.
Mommy wow! I have a real amp now!
Reliability
:8
Peaveys are very reliable. At least for the price and in comparison to other amps at the price. Crates break down, Randalls post 80's do as well as Carvins and (newer) Marshalls. Any modern PCB amp is bound to have problems according to most of the amp snobs who are somewhat correct. This is luckily one of the companies that has the least problems these days as far as reliability. And its so ruggedly built that it should last a long time with little trouble.
Customer Support
:10
I like how Peavey has made their company reps available to talk on internet message boards, etc. I have had a few correspondences with their techs, and they seem like they care about their customers. I don't agree with Hartley politically, but his customer support is great at least from my experience.
Overall Rating
:10
I've been playing about 15 years. I used to be a tone dimwit and didn't know that my amps and equipment caused a major hurdle in me musically progressing and with bands, etc. Thanks to many at Harmony Central and elsewhere, I've learned a lot about amps, guitars, and getting a good tone. I'm trying to form a band right now and this time people will be impressed with my tone because I have a kick ass amp, a 5150! This amp is a great deal and you can get kick ass pounding metal out of this amp very easily. Adjust it enough and you can get rock, blues, etc. Its more versatile than people give it credit for. The sustain and articulation are KILLER! But the best thing its built for is one thing- to enable you to MELT PEOPLE'S FACES!
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $500
Submitted 11/19/2003
at 08:35pm
by closedcasketeric
Features
:6
The Head i own was made in 98. it is the signature model. 2 channels. not much to do really but all i play is metal so 2 channels is all i need.
Sound Quality
:9
Im playing an Ibanez Rg550 with an emg81 in the bridge and a 58 in the neck (yes a 58). It fits the tone i want perfectly (arch enemy, black dahlia murder, alifeoncelost, cannibal corpse, etc.). for me its been a very quite amp. i can get any distortion tone i pretty much want out of it such as an early 80s sound such as the scorpions (pre-5 bass-5 mid-4 treb-8 res-6 pres-8) or a really brutal tone(pre-8 bass-7 mid-3 treb-9 res-7 pres-9). the clean distorts at higher levels but i love the way it sounds if you flip the crunch it you can definatly get the brown sound. (also i have mesa tubes in place which boosts the sound A LOT)
Reliability
:10
this amp is very reliable. i do gig it without a back up and its never failed me.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
nope
Overall Rating
:8
very great amp. does what you need it to do. i would definatly replace this is stolen
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $499 w/412 cab used
Submitted 11/14/2003
at 07:19am
by Jabo
Email: none
Features
:7
1996 model all tube ultra distortion head. 2 channels: Lead / Rythym shared 3 band EQ. 120 watts from 4 6L6 tubes. Switchable effects loop -- no reverb.
Sound Quality
:10
This was designed for Eddie's sound. A stock model has BRUTAL gain. As many reviewers have noted, this does not have a clean channel - that's why it's labeled Rhythm. This amp can get a workable clean sound; you have to change the factory tubes. Replace the middle preamp tube with a 12AT7 and you get much more useable headroom. You can actually crank the gain on the Lead channel and get some use out of it instead of mud. This also cleans up the Rhythm channel. The 12AT7 tames the head and makes it not just a "metal" head, though the sounds are still there just at a higher gain setting. Also it makes your guitar's volume control function for more than just an on/off switch.
Reliability
:10
I've had this amp for 6 years without any problem but power tube replacemnt. Use Ruby 6L6GC's and it just seems to add definition. Just changed out all preamp tubes to Electro Harmonix 12AX7's with the exception of the middle tube being replaced with an Electro Harmonix 12AT7. Never broken down.
Customer Support
:8
Peavey has a good customer service department. I spoke with them inquiring about a new footswitch as well as suggestions on how to get a particular sound.
Overall Rating
:9
I've been playing for over 15 years and this was the first tube amp I'd bought. I have owned Fender's Marshalls and Boogies since, but I can't get rid of this head. It's the best thing Peavey has done for themselves. This head has taken some of the stigma away from their company making poor sounding amps. It's also user friendly. The power tubes do not have an adjustable bias (5150II's do) so just get a matched quartet of 6L6's and you are good to go! Get this head and CHANGE THE TUBES! Tube amps are like guitars -- they all need a little something extra. Pickups - strings - hardware can all make a guitar sound better. Higher quality tubes and speakers do the same for tube amps. I wish that ANY amplifier company could make a 30/40 watt version of this head using EL84's for such a good price.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $350$ used
Submitted 11/01/2003
at 09:56am
by Anonymous
Features
:No Opinion
you know the features
Sound Quality
:No Opinion
I've played through many 5150's. Some sound like cardboard, some sound o.k. and some sound huge. This particular head, from '92, is a real gem. I'm running NOS American 6l6 and NOS preamp tubes. I'm in a modern rock band, well it's like aperfect circle mixed with mighty van halen. The rhythm guitar player uses a rectifier, which compliments the 80's evh tone coming from my side of the stage. Bottom line, this amp rocks. I know this is beating a dead horse, but for the mony you pay, and the sound you get, can't beat it. I usually run a stereo set up with my old head dry and a newer 5150 wet. No clean. Just back the volume off on the guitar for cleaner sounds. I own a triple rec which is real heavy, but harder for me to get "balls" out of it. The 5150 exudes "balls."
My band just a couple weeks ago played with with a bunch of bands in Little Rock, AR, including Staind, and Trapt, yeah, yeah, but the point is they were all using boogie's and Diezel's and when we took to the stage, roadies, techs, other band members where turning their heads to see what was making all the good noise. Yep a cheap peavey. I'm telling you man, peavey 5150's can rock. Just work with them a little bit. Our band is called starkz.
Reliability
:No Opinion
built very well.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
gene ford at peavey is a real cool cat. very helpful.
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
Really like it. Would also like to try Soldano.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $450 used
Submitted 11/01/2003
at 03:05am
by Anonymous
Features
:5
The main reason I am writing this review is because people keep referring to the "clean" channel. There is no clean channel. You get two gain channels, rhythm and lead. Peavey?s Ultra Plus, which is now replaced by the XXX, had reverb and a totally clean channel, plus the rhythm and lead channels. That amp didn?t have as much gain, but some reviewers keep saying they never turn their gain past 4-6. So the Ultra Plus would be a better choice for them.
Sound Quality
:10
I play only noisy punk rock/hardcore. I've recorded with Mr. 5150 and I like recording with it better than playing live with it, mainly because it's hard to turn down the gain live so people can actually hear what you are playing when you're used to practicing with it that way. The "clean" (rhythm) channel is meant to be played with as much gain as the lead. The lead has more sustain and is better for muting, more of a low end sound but it helps solos come out a bit more too. The ?clean? channel with gain at 10 is probably the best sound I?ve heard come out of an amp. It is a sound no amp manufacturer seems to want to make, but a lot of players would like. Total broken glass trebly gain without a hint of metal, although it would be good for black metal. I would replace the power tubes right away but the pre amp can be left alone. PS Mesas sound great if you dont play anything but a muted E chord.
Reliability
:7
I've had mine into the shop a few times but it was just me spazzing over nothing. The effects loops doesnt work on mine, but I dont need it. Self biasing, so changing a tube is like changing a light bulb.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:9
I've played for 14 years. I used to use one of those ampeg solid state 140 watt metal heads with reverb and chorus. Those things had a super brutal high end non metal distortion too. I wanted a 5150 but came back from the store with an Ultra Plus, because it was more versitile. I guess that was sort of like going to buy a Corvette and coming back with a minivan. The Ultra Plus broke, I bought the 5150, and I never got the Ultra Plus fixed.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $969
Submitted 10/31/2003
at 07:32pm
by Anonymous
Features
:8
120 watts. Clean, Crunch, and Lead channels. Footswitchable effects loop. Separate eq for each channel. You should know all this by now if your reading reviews on it.
Sound Quality
:9
I've been playing guitar for about 8 years now and this is the best amp I've owned so far. I'm not saying its the best amp in the world, I'm saying its the best amp I've personally tried and owned. I play all types of music but mostly blues and metal. I use a PRS CE22 Maple Top, LTD EC-1000, and Fender Deluxe Double Fat Strat. I went to a local music store to try out a Marshall JCM2000 and I was very dissapointed. The Marshall was too muddy and buzzy. But then I plugged in to a Peavey 5150II and it was exactly the sound I was looking for. This amp suits metal tones perfectly with badass sounding palmutes. It's allright for blues tones but its pretty obvious there are better sounding blues amps out there. I used to own a Crate BV120HB and I hated it so much. This amp kicks the BV's ass, but then again, what doesn't. This amp has plenty of gain, I usually keep the gain between 6 and 7. This amp sounded very good out of the box but it sounded even better when I put my GE-7 in the FX loop. I highly recommend getting a noise gate if you're going to get this amp since it tends to feedback at high gain settings. I noticed the feedback goes away if you have the guitar volume knob around 9 or 8.5. I would compare the sound of this amp to Hatebreed's tone. The clean channel is pretty good too. It's a little too bright for my taste but its not as bad as other people have said. I highly recommend this amp to anyone who plays metal. It has enough gain if to suit anyone's taste. I give this amp a nine because of the clean channel.
Reliability
:No Opinion
I've only owned it for about a month but it hasn't given me any trouble and I don't think it ever will.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Only owned for a month.
Overall Rating
:9
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $950.00 used
Submitted 10/30/2003
at 10:36am
by Rollie Delgado
Email: rwd2 at adelphia<dot>net
Features
:9
Price Paid: $950.00 Head and Bottom Cab
This is a 120 watt all tube guitar amplifier. 5 12ax7 preamp tubes, 4 6L6 power tubes. Two channels. Clean and dirty, both footswichable. The clean channel has a crunch switch which creates a second dirty channel. This is a nice feature which allows you to get a much larger variety of dirty sounds which is what this amplifier was designed to do. The clean channel also has a bright switch and it works well to add more sound variety. This amp was made fairly recently. It might be a year or so old. It is the signature model. It has a footswitchable effects loop which is very nice to have. It works well. Nice and quiet. No popping. I got both the head and bottom cab in mint condition. The amp has all of the features that I would ever need for my purposes. I play strictly 80's early 90's guitar based metal, Dokken, Van halen, Dio, Ratt etc.... and for that it is the perfect amp. For what it was designed to do I give it a 9.5 in the features department. In my opinion a 10 does not exist, but this is about as close as you will get. The amp has more than enough power. I plan on starting to gig again in the future, but for now i use it for home practicing.
Sound Quality
:10
OK, here we go. I have been playing guitar for 23 years and for 10 of those I was the head guitar tech at Ernie Ball Music Man guitars. I was one of the the techs there when Eddie was designing the EVH guitar and this amp was being designed. My equipment consists of an old (circa 1991) Music Man EVH guitar with a floyd rose trem, a small rack with a BBE 462 Sonic Maximizer, and an Alesis Midiverb III. Thats it. I learned a few things about tone while working at Music Man and the one thing I did to my guitar was raise the bridge pickup just a little. There is a sweet spot that you have to nail to get more output. Too close will kill your sustain, but just right is unbeleivable and it really makes a difference in your tone. Like I said this amp is perfect for over the top high gain 80's metal. It really isn't that noisy considering it's high gain structure. If you know how to control your guitar and set your tones you will be alright. Any amp with this much gain is going to have a little hiss. Solution: Get a hush unit if it bothers you that much. I have never had a problem with feedback at high volumes. I stand back and to the side of the amp and that cures that problem.
As for sounds that I can get with the amp, I can pretty much nail any Van Halen Tone ever made! It will do George Lynch/Dokken (think Back for the Attack)perfectly. Warren DiMartini, Nuno, you name it! It does the Van halen Fair Warning tone (his best!) to a tee and then some. I love gain, and this amp is sheer heaven. You don't need effects when you have this much gain to play with. I have owned or played through just about every kind of rock and roll amp that you can think of, Marshalls, Boogies, Soldano's, Bogners and many more and this amp just kills them all. More gain than all of them, and this is rock stock! No JJ tubes or bias mods. I have heard 5150's with the JJ tubes and mods and it just makes the amp even better. Unstoppable. I recommend that mod for these amps and will be doing it as soon as my tubes wear out.The price to performance ratio of this amp is unbeatable. Why pay $2000 dollars for a head when this sounds as good for $600.00. My hats off to peavey and Eddie, they nailed it. The "clean" channel is a dirty clean. With the crunch and bright switches off and plugged into the low gain input with your guitar volume about halfway it is passable but not a "true" clean sound. It was not designed to do that. This is strictly a distortion amp. Use a Roland JC-120 or Fender Twin for your clean amp. You want clean? Use a seperate amp. The distortion is the most brutal I have ever heard and you could never use it all(some of you could!). Endless sustain, and beautiful even ordered harmonics. String pinches just jump out at you with hardly any effort(Fair Warning tone again!). Staccato fast double picking is fat and articulate and has that wicked fat "pick click" sound. Legato hammering and pull offs are effortless. The resonance an presence controls really make the sound. You can dial in HUGE bottom end and then tighten it up with the presence control. Very tight and defined, no mud to speak of and if you add the sonic maximizer through the effects loop.... just be careful, you will not believe your ears. It's like adding a THIRD distortion channel to the amp! Fucking incredible!
Use the 5150 bottom cab with this amp if you want to get it's full potential. This is personal preference of course and you may prefer a Marshall with vintage 30's or some other configuraion, but that cab sounds GIGANTIC. Will not fart! And i have tried! They are a good match for each other. The amp definetly sounds a little different with another cab. Get a good cab if you can afford it.
Reliability
:9
Other than the normal tube wear I have not had a problem with the amp yet. It's built like a tank and looks like it too. I would and have used it without a backup. Keep it clean and baby it and I think it would probably last you your whole career. If i had not sold my original EVH head back in 1996 It would probably still be kicking.
Customer Support
:8
I have called/ emailed Peavey on occasion about technical issues and they have gotten back to me in fairly reasonable time. Sometimes a little slow but not too bad.
Overall Rating
:10
Been playing for 23 years. I own no other amps or guitars other than what I have mentioned. Don't need them. I would buy another one right away if it were lost or stolen. Same model. Same bottom cab. The only thing I don't like about it......... is nothing! Love it. I chose this amp over all other for it's superior sound and price. You just cant beat it for the money. I'd still buy it at twice the price.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $400
Submitted 10/27/2003
at 09:36am
by Anonymous
Features
:6
94 120watt 4 5881 and 5 12AX7 preamp tubes
non versatile, This is a Rock n Roll amp. If you want versatile you will need to ad a nice preamp and effects.
This amp has plenty of power for anyone who isnt playing in a stadium.
Sound Quality
:9
I play this head through the original 4.12 cab. It is what it is a tremendous high gain amp. It is not clean, but like I said if you want clean you need a clean preamp. Sounds?? Thick, Grind,Heavy,Low end, Massive, ..This is without any effects, It is extreme and by itself a excellent sound. Even better with a good preamp and effects. I cant compare the sound.. It sounds like a 5150 and that is good enough for me.
Reliability
:8
I would not gig this without a back up. It has never failed me. But I take good care of it.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
None needed.
Overall Rating
:9
I own lots of guitars and gear and have been playing for 15 or more years. I wrote this to tell others my personal opinion of this amp is that it is simple and has no bells and whistles. It is not hard to get real good tone with this amp with just a guitar and cord. But add good effects and a good preamp and it shines even more. I would not change anything about this amp. I like its Simple yet Brutal approach. If you are a bed room rocker forget this head, It needs to be played loud to get good tube overdrive. And a Power Soak will let you get away with a little but hell man if you want a half stack for your bedroom rock on dude!! With the pregain on 7 and post gain on 6 this amp is loud enough to have you arrested if you have neighbors. The freaken low end will vibrate your skull and the grind will suck the air from the room .
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $400.00 used
Submitted 10/15/2003
at 11:08pm
by Reed Thompson
Email: thoree09<at>evergreen dot edu
Features
:8
Alright... This amp is a great fucking amp. No mater what mister heavy fucking metal guy from ENFORSAKEN says. It gets the job done and it sounds fucking awsome. You gotta problem with your shitty-ass speakers than get some new one... or just pull your head out of your ass. Annyway, that aside. The the Crunch sound on this amp is through the roof. The clean sound is OK (A/B it with something better). The only problem is the channels sharring EQ.
Sound Quality
:9
Awsome awsome crunch, you can get a great sound out of this amp if you know how to use it, again the clean channel isn't the best you are going to find but don't buy it for the clean, buy it for the ripping distortion.
Reliability
:10
Never had a problem. It's built like a tank. I could probebly fight off armies of Ninja if I needed to.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
I have never dealt with Peavey. I imagine if they can make a product as dependable as this amp then they are probebly pretty good business people.
Overall Rating
:8
Awsome awsome awsome. Don't be fooled by people who don't know a tube from the bogger they just pulled out of their nose and are preparing to eat (putting your name in all capitol letters doesn't make you cool just in case anyone was wondering). Good rock and roll amp, get another amp to go with it for clean.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $400 used
Submitted 10/13/2003
at 05:04pm
by Josh Johns
Email: j_johns<at>cox-internet dot com
Features
:8
I have the block letter model head. It has two channels (rythym and lead) that share one eq, and this is my biggest complaint. The 5150 II has seperate eqs for each channel, but it's distortion doesn't have as much balls to it, and that's what you trade for being able to have a better clean tone. I wouldn't mind having another channel with a kind of in-between distortion, and I have considered using another anp with an A-B switch for clean, and using the Crunch button on the Rythym channel for this purpose. The rythym also has a bright channel, which I recommend you never turn off. It also has a footswitchable effects loop that I have never used yet, but I've considered using it for an eq to tweak my clean tone a bit. Each channel has a pre and post gain, and there are a general resonence and presence settings. With 120 of tube power it's definately loud enough the play anywhere you want. Another problem I find is that if I set the post-gain lower than 3.5, I just don't get the good crunch out of my tubes, so it's hard to play quitely and still get good tone, but this is almost a given.
I got a super good deal of $400 on it because the person on ebay spelled peavey "peavy". I felt kind of sorry for him, but oh well. I give it an 8 because of the single eq, mainly.
Sound Quality
:10
I use a Schecter Ultra (guilty-pleasure) with a Seymour Duncan JB59 and sometimes my other guitarists' ESP LTD Eclipse 300 with a EMG-81.
I use this amp in emo-core band. It's super versitlile, and I have a tone that's just between hard rock and metal that compliments the lead guitarist's Mesa/Boogie triple rec nicely. It doesn't sound the same as the Mesa/Boogie by any means, but the tube tone is great and stands up well against the Boogie especially for the price.
Playing around I've got some decent jazz/blues tones out of it, and I can get some brutal metal tones out of it as well. Though setting up the sounds you want is a very subtle art, and I'll give you a few tips.
First the distortion. On your lead channel set your pre-gain at least to 2 or 3 and not higher than 8. I know it has up to 10, but it just starts to sound bad with the pre-gain that high. Even the most brutal metal bands I have seen (Living Sacrafice is all I can think of off the top of my head) don't set the pre-gain higher than 8. Mine's set at 6.5 or so. Next, there's the eq. This is the most subtle art. Though it's hard to change it and dramatically change your tone, you don't want to set anything under 3 or over 8 (just like the pre-gain). Many metal-heads would think pre-gain 10, low 10, mids 1, high 10, but this frankly sounds awful, and I imagine that's the reason that some people have a hard time finding a brutal metal tone. I set mine at 7, 4.5 and 5, which is almost too midsy by itself, but it rather compliments the tone of the Mesa. Next, you need to set your resonence and presence. Once again, don't set them below 3 and above 8. This is where your tone is defined really. Mine's set at 7 and 5. It's subtle, and you're just going to have to play around alot with it to get what you want, but when you've found it, it's sweet.
Now, you can do the same for the clean channel, but then the distortion's not perfect. I just set it up for the distortion, and deal with the clean tone. It's by no means awful, but it's just not as warm as I'd like. I like to have my pre-gain at 5.75, and that's almost too harsh, but since most of my clean parts are single-note leads over picking parts or strumed parts, it works out for me (I just have to strum lightly on when it's called for). Pretty much to get any ammount of volume out of it, your going to want to leave it at at least 4. Like I said, leave the bright button in, unless you want to put in the crunch and make a really blusey distortion. This also brings up the possibility of using the crunch on this. With this in, it becomes basicly the lead channel, with a bit less pre-gain. I've gotten some really good rock tones that are harder to find on the lead channel using this. Like I said, I've thought about using it for that, and getting another amp for clean, so that I can get my clean perfect and be a bit more dynamic, with a more rock tone, then a brutal metal tone for harmonies and such.
Reliability
:9
When I got this amp in the mail, and pluged it it, it sounded okay, but there seemed to be something wrong. As it turned out, I had a couple of blown tubes, and when I replaced them, it was so much better. This thing is a tank though, and I don't think there's a need to put it in a case, like my other guitarists' Mesa. I might trust it to tour without a backup, but we have one just in case.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never delt with them, but my amp-tech said if something went wrong, it would be really easy to repair (it turned out to be a couple of dead tubes).
Also, one of my friends got one of these at a pawn shop for $200, because it wouldn't turn on. All that was wrong with it was a shorted power cable, and they replaced that, and it worked good as new!
Overall Rating
:10
I've had this for about 6 months, and though I've only been playing guitar about 2 years, but all of that time I have been very serious, and I know I've spent more time and effort than some people who have been playing twice as long. Like I said, it's not a Mesa/Boogie, but it still holds it own, and in my band situation, it's great. If it was stolen, I might consider getting a 5150 II, mainly for the seperate eqs, but I definately wouldn't settle for anything less. If I was to get a Boogie, I wouldn't sell my 5150.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $500 used
Submitted 10/09/2003
at 09:47am
by Anonymous
Features
:9
Early block letter EVH model. Bought used off e-Bay. I'm only giving a 9 because clean & overdrive share the same EQ controls, but who the hell buys a 5150 for the clean channel anyway. Never had a problem with the effects loop, and effects work great through it. I play anything from CCR to Slayer, and it does fine. For $500, how can anyone complain. Came with a footswitch to change between and channels and turn on/off the effects loop.
Sound Quality
:10
I play a Les Paul, Explorer, and Ibanez RG570 through it. With a little adjusting, you can get good sounds for all of them. This amp obviously prefers high gain chunky shit, but will work for alot more. If you want crushing distortion, this has it, and not that harsh, everyone plays a Mesa, mainstream distortion. I do use a Mesa 2x12 recto cab with it. That complements the 5150 very nice. The cab was worth the money. The 5150's distortion has alot more feel to it. In Flames & Soilwork uses these. Jerry Cantrell, Devin Townsend, even Nuge uses 5150's. It is a bit noisy at high volumes, but I've had no problems with feedback. From heavy chunk picking to speed picking, it does very well.
Reliability
:10
Thing it built like a friekin' bomb shelter. Has to weigh 50 lbs. Never had a problem with it.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:10
I've been playing for 8 years and I've found my amp of choice. I've tried alot of other stuff (Mesa, Marshall, Crate, Randall). This is, in my opinion, by far superior in sound quality for rock and metal. Mesa's are too expensive, to me Marshall's sound weak, Crate and Randall are weak solid state amps with no feel to them. If you want tubes, get this amp.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 09/27/2003
at 06:30am
by Anonymous
Features
:No Opinion
first off i play extreme music in a very popular death metal band...if that doesn't do it for ya, then stop reading right here. i'm in an extremely brutal death/grind band and i use this amp for practice at home/studio work, etc. this is my take on the amp, and if you don't agree with me, that's fine, i could give a fuck. i just hadda respond to this dude from enforsaken. number one- enforsaken is a super gay name. number two- the band sounds like shit anyhow, and must sound even worse now if you decided that newer randall shit sounds any good. man, you MUST have done something wrong...and since you sound so convinced it's the amp and not YOU...maybe you're just retarded and wouldn't know a good guitar sound if it bit you in the ass. if you're playing brutal shit, this amp can take your head off if you've got it set up right. you're prolly one of those homos that cuts all the mids and tunes down to Z 'cus it's BRRRROOOOOOTTTTTTAAAAAAAAAUUUUULAUALALLLL to not have any midrange in your sound. the guitar is a midrange instrument not a fucking sludge noise maker. it's people like you that give metal a bad name when you write that all your mistakes show up with this amp. what a surprise that you like mesa stuff! i imagine by mesa you mean the dual recto....and that thing is extremely overrated and muddy.... that new randall shit is gayer than gay. either you're a dumbfuck or your amp needs a retubing. didja try that, sport? if you hate it so much, why DIDNT you take it to an amp tech to have it looked over? don't just trash it because YOU couldn't get a good sound out of it. it's the player not the amp, pal. oh yeah, your little rant about how "sloppy playing really comes thru..." and "you'd hafta be a really good player to get anything out of this amp" gave me the needed comedy relief for today. hahahaha. what the fuck are you doing even PLAYING guitar, man? if you play like shit, you play like shit. hiding behind tons of gain and what not won't make you sound great. learn to play and you'd be surprised what this amp could do for you.
Sound Quality
:No Opinion
Reliability
:No Opinion
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $450 used
Submitted 09/20/2003
at 09:04pm
by Steve Stell from Enforsaken
Email: enforsakencult<at>hotmail dot com
Features
:5
Mid 1990's. Peavey 5150 Signature amp head, not block EVH early model. All of the features that everyone else describes. 120 watts, very loud amp. Tube amp (oh goodie!) Borderline useless EQ. Have been using it for almost 4 years (4 wasted years!) Have used it live and for gigging. Used it for my metal band Enforsaken. Blah, blah, blah.
Sound Quality
:3
First of all, I play guitar in the metal band ENFORSAKEN. I used this amp to play extreme metal. Second of all, if you want to sound like Van Halen, go buy a vintage Marshall head. Use what he actually used on those classic late 70's and 80's recordings. This was a pathetic attempt to cash in on his name by Peavey. I'll bet Van Halen himself took the check to the bank, then sold all of the free ones he got from Peavey. Either that, or they're sitting in a storage locker somewhere in California collecting dust. That's where they belong. So anyways, this is my take on this amp. Clean channel sucks. I never used it. As for the distortion channel: This amp has been adopted by metal bands like Arch Enemy, In Flames, Dark Tranquillity, Carcass (rip) and hundreds more. BTW, these bands are moving on from the 5150 just like me. Half of them don't use it in the studio anymore. In the studio, you can make this thing sound fairly decent. But it will take some heavy eq'ing/processing for sure. The sound when you plug straight in is very brittle and crusty. When you're blasting this amp at a volume setting of 3 (any higher is pointless, it seems to almost max out at 5) the sound coming out of the speakers is atrocious. You have to be a very good player to make this thing sound acceptable in a live setting. It's very unforgiving. All fucked up notes and sloppy playing will come through on this amp. Some people swear by it, i used to, but there are simply better amps out there. It's a cheap amp. i used this in Enforsaken for 4 years. I wish i would have spent the extra few hundred on a mesa boogie. THERE ARE MUCH HEAVIER AND BETTER SOUNDING AMPS OUT THERE NOWADAYS. This amp was cool in 1993. This amp sucks in 2003. I have played this through a Marshall cab , Peavey 5150 4x12 cab and a Randall cab. To me, three shitty sounds. It's loud for band practice. That's a good thing. As for tone, It sucks by itself. I don't like hooking up all kinds of fucking pedals/processors when playing. You should just plug in and rock. So what if it's a tube amp? It still sounds like shit. I've tried every tube combination on earth on it. I've played everything from a Gibson Les Paul to an Ibanez Satriani model through it. I gave it a chance. I have heard worse. I am being hard on it here, but I can be since i've dealt with it forever. Fuck it. I sold it on ebay and bought a Randall 200 RHSC. You want to get a crushing fucking metal sound and not go broke? Go Randall. This Randall blow the 5150 out of the water. If you want a loud, inexpensive tube amp go for it. Add some effects pedals to help with the problems it has by itself. But to me, you can't "polish a turd." If you want something that sounds bad ass from the git go, get a Randall or Mesa Boogie. That is if you're into really heavy fucking metal.
Reliability
:10
One good thing, never had a problem with it. It is built well. Pre amp tube compartment is located in a shitty, difficult to access area of the amp, but no big deal really.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never had to call Peavey. I'm not a retard either. I can read instructions manuals. I'm not one to call up some place and bitch and moan because i'm a fucking moron that doesn't know what kind of power amp tubes I should buy. If it had a problem, I'd call a local amp tech to fix it.
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
I've been playing 14 years. I know what sounds good and what sounds like shit at this point. If it was stolen before I sold it, i would be grateful. The thief could then start a shitty nu metal band with his piece of shit loser friends. By the time he plugged into it, I'd have already bought a amp that dosen't suck. I'd be fucking his girlfriend a week later as well. It would all work out. LOL!
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $810
Submitted 09/01/2003
at 10:05pm
by Aaron D.
Features
:7
I got this amp brand new from musician's superstore this past july. This amp is 120 watts, which is plenty. It doesn't have reverb, which for me isn't a problem, but for some it might be.
Sound Quality
:10
I'm using this amp with a esp eclipse with emg 81 pickups and also with a tele. I run this head through a VHT fat bottom cab with the p50 speakers. It has so much bottom end i nearly empty my bowels when i hit a palm muted open chord in drop c tuning. I play mainly metalcore stuff like Unearth and Darkest Hour, and this amp is exactly what I was looking for. The clean channel is rarely used by me, but when it is, i think it sounds just fine. You just have to eq it right, without too much trebel. But where this amp really shines, is in the distortion department. It's sooooooo heavy. If you play any kind of hardcore/metalcore/death metal, this is the amp to get. So heavy, and the distortion doesn't crap out with a lot of gain either. Just make sure you have a good cab to go with it, and not some little marshall with mini 12's or something.
Reliability
:10
This thing is a beast. So heavy, but it can take a beating. Mine has been dropped and has fallen off of my cab during shows due to myself or other bandmembers being knocked into it during a song. I don't use a backup rig, due in part to lack of funds and also in part that this thing is built to last.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
haven't had to.
Overall Rating
:10
If this was stolen or lost i'd go get another one asap. It's just so good. It might not be everyone's cup of tea, but for my stlyle, it's perfect.
Product: Peavey 5150 Price Paid: US $1200
Submitted 08/17/2003
at 08:53pm
by Jason H.
Features
:10
Made in : '96 - Signature Edition w/ slant cab.
Versatility - Not a lot of features on the head, but the effects loop makes up for a lot. I actually find it more versatile to find the effects I like and stick them in that, rather than having a Crate-style built-in Chorus that sucks.
Sound Quality
:10
I primarily use a Peavy Nitro Limited with this head, but occasionally conenect a cheap Strat knock-off. Very little noise, even with a Keeley Mod Boss MT-2 connected to it. Using it on the lead channel is another story though...
Clean channel sounds great...especially with flange or chorus. The most kick-ass part of this amp is the almost backwards-reverb bass attack that comes from nowhere when palm-muting. Tone kicks ass. Loud as hell, too.
Reliability
:10
Reliability is awesome. I've toured with this and taken it on several gigs over the years. Never had to replace anything on it. Tubes are 7 years old.
Built like a tank.
Customer Support
:10
Dealt w/ Peavey through mail before, regarding replacement manuals for a few of their other products and received them free of charge later the same week.
Overall Rating
:10
$1200 for both the head and the cab...that was in '96. Been playing for 20 years, and have never regretter purchasing this amp.