June 2009 \ Reviews \ Amps \ Cornford Roadhouse 30 Combo Amp Review

Cornford Roadhouse 30 Combo Amp Review

Kenny Rardin

The Cornford Roadhouse 30 is a portable, affordable option for rock


Premier Guitar June 2009

(1 of 2)
Watch Guthrie Govan play the Cornford Roadhouse 50:
Cornford Amplification, a small company in England producing very high-quality tube amps, has been with us for quite a few years now. It seems, however, that they’re not widely known here in the United States. With the introduction of the Roadhouse line of amplifiers, Paul Cornford is about to change that. The original high-end amps, such as the Hellcat, The MK50-II, The Ritchie Kotzen amp, and others, are of course still with us. However, Paul felt that he needed a new line of lower priced amps, built with the same high quality, to help address the needs of guitarists who could not afford the high-end models. The Cornford Roadhouse 30 1x12 combo was the model I received for review. It’s a small, lightweight package, similar in size to a Blues Deluxe, and features a black grille cloth with a black lizard vinyl covering.

Set ‘em Up
Digging in, the first thing that caught my eye was the Celestion Vintage 30 speaker, which carries an 8-ohm rating. The tube compliment is also impressive: two EL34s and three 12AX7s. Usually in a 30-watt amp we’d expect to see EL84 type tubes, but the EL34 is less noisy and has a better life expectancy. The amp is cathode biased, rather than fixed bias, which is partly responsible for the lower wattage it produces (Cornford’s 50-watt version is fixed bias, and carries the same tube compliment).

Starting left on the control panel, we have the Input jack, which is 1 megohm, optimal for electric guitar usage. Next is Gain, a small toggle switch for activating the Boost feature, the Boost control, and Bass, Middle and Treble tone controls. This is followed by the Send and Return jacks for the effects loop, and the Master Volume control and On/Off/Standby switch.

The rear panel features an IEC-type mains inlet socket, high-tension fuse holder, and 5speaker jacks: one 16-ohm, two 8-ohm and two 4-ohm loads. I have always preferred this type of impedance switching, as opposed to the rotary or switch type. Direct connection to the transformer taps is more reliable. At the end of the back panel is the footswitch jack for the one-button Boost switch, which is provided with the amp. It overrides the switch on the front panel.

Knock ‘em Down
I have to say I was pleasantly surprised when I first fired up the amp. I always start with Tone and Gain controls all on twelve o’clock. I used my trusty Les Paul Custom with original ‘50s PAF pickups first. The tone was warm and very bluesy, reminiscent of very early Clapton tone with a sweet, smooth overdrive and just the right amount of harmonics. I had discovered a killer blues amp and I hadn’t even turned a knob yet. The tone controls sweep through a wide range, much like other Cornford amps I’ve played, and it was easy to dial in the tones I wanted.

   1 | 2    Next »

Related Articles

ValveTrain Trenton Amp Review
Albion Gulfstream 30 Amp Review
Nolatone Ampworks Rotten Johnny Combo Amp Review
VOX Night Train NT15H Head Review
C.B. Evans Spitfire Review


Comments

(18 comments) display by
UsernameComment
Scooter
on 11/27/2011
Everyone's entitled to their own opinion. I bought a RH30 from Wally at Solid Body / Cornford USA, when the first batch came in after NAMM and have been WAY pleased with it. But it's the tone "I" was looking for. I'm an old shredder that now does alot of blues and southern driven rock (Crowes, Badlands, Gov't Mule style), I've owned many amps, and this one is PERFECT for that stuff (IMO!!)... I think P.Mason may have gotten a lemon. Or his taste is strictly that of the Fuchs and Dumble type thing. The RH30 is nothing like those. It has a voice of it's own. When I turn my master up to around 2:00 the harmonics just bloom out of it, and natural power tube OD definitely does start to occur. BUT It stays tight and focused, allowing me to add in just the right amount of preamp drive... And even then, it remains super tight and articulate, without getting overly "saggy" and compressed (like some Fender and Fuchs models... That some people adore... Ond that's OK!! LOL!). If I want that type of thing, I add a Les Lius pedal in front... Which brings up other fine facts... It takes pedals incredibly, and the FX loop is clean as a whistle! Cleans up nice with the guitar volume (even when the OD boost is engaged). Reacts perfectly to picking nuances. Plenty of tight bottom end without being "boomy"... What more could you ask for?!?!? It's still my main amp, since the day I picked it up! Everyone who plays through it falls in love, and every soundman I've used has complimented my greatly on my tone. "I.M.O." I dig the heck out of it!THANKS again WALLY!!!!!!

Paul Mason Hater
on 11/16/2011
Paul... you're comments are so funny. you defend yourself and you know you're an Ass. so just give up dude. lol. you just say shit to piss people off. Grow Up. We here in the US call people like you Assholes.. as for "Daft" more like "Douche" so.. whatever dude. Listen to Richie Kotzen's Get Up CD and Tell us that Cornford sucks. You ain't Kotzen and you'll Never be.. so close your mouth and Learn to Play. Fuchs???? lol.. to quote you.. "Doesn't seem like they're taking over the world" Those amps blow. Cornford is where it's at son. Nobody cares about your comments. Sure not many people know about Cornford as much as a Mesa or Marshal... but Hey... they're getting out there.. and despite ppl like You.. People want to buy something Different and Good. So just let them. Shut Your Face.
Wally
on 08/02/2011
It's ok, we can't please everyone. We all have different ears and hands thank goodness, or else we would sound the same. I don't think I would compare a Cornford to a Fender as the RH30 is not meant to compete at all with Fenders of today. Cheers, Wally Cornford USA
bodd66
on 01/03/2011
I want to ad a bit more to my last comment as I have now gigged the 30W head a few times. It is very 'modern' voiced & has a rather piercing top end. I have had to roll the treble right back. The thing is, there is nothing wrong with using the full sweep of the pot TO THE LEFT. I just needed to get my head around not needing tone pots to go past halfway to get GREAT tone. When I was in the mood to play more rootsy blues or vintage rock I found the modern voicing a bit of a hindrance so I put it up for sale...I then came to my senses! I like to play so many different styles of music that asking this amp to do it all is too much really. BUT it comes close. I love the chunky bottom end at low volumes. It sounds good with all my guitars from Suhr/Strat tones to LP & Wolfgang riffage. For the price I don't think there is anything out there to match it - yet. Mason's view about no power amp drive is interesting. He does have a point but I have a Reinhardt Ampzilla that needs power amp volume to get it to sing which is great, except everyones stands around with their fingers in their ears as it can be really loud. So this head will play a small gig happily as well as full on if you put it through a 4X12 so I love that about it which is why I'm keeping it.
bodd66
on 09/22/2010
I can't help but throw my 2 cents in. I have recently got a Roadhouse 30W Head & I must admit, Paul Mason's negative reviews (I've seen his other ones)nearly put me off buying it. I finally got some common sense & thought both Premier Guitar & Guitarist Magazine amongst others gave it 5/5 glowing reviews. Surely they can't both have got it so wrong?...Of course they didn't. Maybe Mason got one with bad tubes? Whatever, his opinion just seems out of kilter with what others are saying. When the amp arrived, I put the tubes in, fired it up & without even looking at the control knobs I had a great tone immediately! I love the gain on this thing. You can turn it all the way up & it is still very useable. The boost switch works better than any others I have played. Now I own a Bogner Mojado Head, a Reinhardt Ampzilla Head & a Blackstar so I had high expectations. I got it. For the price, I believe it is a bargain. I got rid of my Bogner Alchemist Head (very dull tone) & my Orange 30W Head (1 dimensional). The controls work really well with each other. It is incredibly simple to dial in a sound you like. How many times have you been in a store & got hot & bothered trying to get a decent sound out of the amp you're trying? Maybe duty/taxes & the exchange rate make the Cornford a little dearer for the USA customers but I can't think of another amp I want over this one for the price I paid for it. It is British EL34ish but with something else thrown in. Anyway, I'm gigging with it & I seem to get a lot of interest from the guitar players out there.
I can't afford a MKII 50W Head at the moment but I'm saving up for one. The Roadhouse hasn't put me off at all. Check one out. You won't be sorry,...unless you're called Mark : )
guitardr
on 09/16/2010
Everybody is entitled to their own opinion: 'nuff said. With Bogner/Fuchs/Mesa amps in the "toolshed", I had the chance to get a mint RH30 combo this past week. I had a concern about the EL34's in it and got lightning response from Wally @ Cornford USA. Bottom line: knowing it's a single channel amp, no onboard reverb, no loop adjustment - it held it's own & then some. I'll support Brian's side of the issues & say that it straddles Brit/US tones. But I've already found out that it sings/screams at any level, and gets more harmonic/demonic with increased levels. It loves all PU's/pedals and IS touch sensitive & reads a player's touch/volume control quite well. Use of a PCB is NOT an issue with it: my tech took a look and said it was intelligently laid out, E-Z to maintain & service, and that it's tone controls did a nice job. And for those Y-Tube demos, a few were right on the money & helped me make a good choice. It's all in the "ear" of the beholder. Nobody was holding a gun to my head when I got it. Built like a tank & simple to get tasty tones from - quest forth.
Brian
on 08/20/2010
The harmonic content of this amp is unbelievable. Maybe cornfords just aren't your thing -- I know a few who just can't dig the tone. Cornfords, in a sense, are weird -- they don't sound like anything else. They're not a purely british or american tone. They're a mix, and somehow it results in representing something really unique and different. To me it's unreal, it's the best. To someone else, it's cool, but it's not his thing -- he'd rather just have a Fender Vibrolux and kick on an drive pedal. For you, it's terrible -- you don't like it. That's all it is. You're being incredibly stupid and driving away all the hype this amp deserves. Which I'm sure it still wouldn't get -- $1500 isn't "dirt cheap." You're not gonna be 14 years old and even attempt to ask your mom to drop money like that. Sure, 2.5k-4k is a big difference in price, but that doesn't change that the amp is not some dirt cheap steal. No, it's a real investment in a piece I will keep with me for as long as I live. Which is my opinion -- "Opinions are like assholes. We all have them, and they all stink"
Brian
on 08/20/2010
Paul Mason, you're an idiot. You must've just listened to those worse then awful demos on youtube, or just have a dud on your hands. That, or you're listening with the price tag, not with your ears. I have this amp. It's the most organic sound i've ever heard on any amp ever. I have not played any of there handwireds, but I listen to guys like greg howe, guthrie govan, richie kotzen, etc. That "cornford" tone is still in this amp, but this amp is much brighter, and in my opinion sounds fatter overall then those amps. Which was the last thing I would expect. (And don't get me wrong, I would kill to have an MK50. or a hellcat. I would just add those two to my arsonel, and not throw out my roadhouse 30 head.) As for "lack of output tube overdrive," my amp definitely sounds better when I put it past from 12 oclock. You must have some crappy old tubes in that thing. This thing's lows are very defining, mids are really the source of that very definable "cornford" quack, and the highs are almost "brittle," in that you smack harder and it breaks up and screams, but holds back when you play smoother. Which brings me to the dynamics and response of this amp -- unbelievable. I can hit any note 4 1/2 million different ways. I could play on a clean setting, and just smack the strings harder to break up. I could play on a drive setting, pick and play very lightly, and it would sound clean. It's above and beyond of any other tube amp I've ever played. This is also why you probably suck -- you probably go balls-out gain and expect this amp to compress and lose that dynamic response that kills your playing, and therefore your tone. But you can't, so you end up sounding like shit. You could play through a roadhouse, a plexi, or even a fender blues jr. -- if you can't play good, you can't sound good. Also, lack of harmonics? That's just stupid. This thing is oozing.
Paul Mason
on 02/07/2010
Sorry, one more small thing I had to add after going back to some of the other review sites around the net, to see how much interest there has been in this amp all these months after my postings. What I have found consists mainly of: cricket... cricket...cricket... It seems as though this amp is not exactly taking the world by storm.
Paul Mason
on 02/07/2010
Mr. Mudbone, I submitted an informative review, full of facts and information that I assembled after long, careful research and testing, advising potential fellow musicians out there of the very logical conclusion that there are many amps out there that sound as good or better, for far less money. You submitted a comment full of nothing but personal insults and utterly subjective personal opinions with nothing factual to back up any of it. It's like the old Shakespeare - Methinks the man doth protest too much! I must have touched a nerve. Responses like yours remind me of road rage - Chill out, man! Do some real comparison tests like I did, and you will see what I mean.



Your Comment:  

All comments are subject to editing or deletion by the Premier Guitar staff.

Your Name:  


Please enter the text you see in the image:  
10

AB1A3379-1032-47FF-BAAD-021D5FF85D5D