May 2012 \ Features \ Builder Profile \ Builder Profile: Chase Tone

Builder Profile: Chase Tone

Joe Charupakorn

When it comes to hardcore authenticity in vintage gear replicas, no one tops Kyle Chase— a lone-ranger builder who says he can hear the difference between stranded and solid-core wire in his Marshall-, Vox-, and Fender-inspired amps and pedals.


Premier Guitar May 2012

(3 of 3)


Left: NOS 1960s original Radiospares carbon fi lm and carbon composition resistors. NOS 1966 Mullard Mustard coupling capacitors. Original Marshall 1960s PVC stranded wire—green, blue, yellow, purple, white, black and red. Original Marshall 1960s PVC Pink stranded wire, as well as original thicker diameter 1960s Marshall pink wire for pot jumpers/input jacks, per original spec of this era amplifi er. NOS rare arched-logo RS silver mica capacitor. NOS Radiospares silver mica tone stack capacitor. NOS custom made perforated Paxolin board from the UK, with original Radiospares split turrets. PEC military-grade stainless steel body, steel shafts, and gold contact potentiometers.
Right: NOS tube sockets. NOS BY137 bullet diodes. NOS BY114 Mullard top-hate diode for bias supply. High quality Rifa brand electrolytic capacitors. 1960s original Radiospares black wire wrap. NOS tube sockets. Cliff UK jacks. New Marshall impedance/voltage selector for reliability. Custom transformers from Merren Audio—through years of extensive testing they were the only transformers that accurately reproduced the original sound.

What about the cabinets? Do you make them yourself?
Yes. I couldn’t find Marshall cabinets or ones on the market today that had the look or tone of the old ones, so I started building them. My father is a carpenter and stonemason. Together, we started dovetailing and designing cabinets from scratch out of Baltic birch plywood, and soon we are going to use a slab of pine that’s a few hundred years old for builds based on the tweed Bassman and tweed Twin.

What’s the price range for your product line?
My Vox Clyde McCoy wah replicas range from $300–$500, and my Vox Grey wah replicas normally range from $500–$650, depending upon what actual NOS components are used. The Grey wah replicas are handwired on old Radiospares circuit boards, with all NOS components, including inductors. For amps, it depends on the build and whether cabinets are involved. To put an average price figure, I’ve been offered $4,000 to $5,000 for the recent JTM45/100-inspired build. But that one is my personal amp. It means something to me and isn’t for sale.

If the price of your NOS-equipped amps is partly influenced by the use of NOS parts, what happens to its value after the amp is used and the parts are either no longer NOS or are replaced by modern components? For instance, is the $5,000 amp worth less when the parts, which directly influence the cost, are no longer present or new?
No, I don’t feel using the amp makes it lose its value. But, yes, any component replaced with a modern part can alter the original tone of the amp. How much of a tonal difference there is, I can’t say. It depends what part you are talking about.

I also want to say that I don’t just copy old tones. I like to move ahead and look forward. I often use original tones as something to aim for. I feel there is a fine line between someone who chases that “brown sound” that so many do—and who also go about it the wrong way—and someone who uses the original tones of the greats as a springboard. I feel that recreating original amps and tones is only the beginning. It’s not the end goal most of the time. I think it would be very boring if everyone just copied someone’s playing style or tone.


« Previous    1 | 2 | 3   

Related Articles

Builder Profile: Visual Sound
Builder Profile: Mesa/Boogie


Comments

(45 comments) display by
UsernameComment
dog tapper
on 02/10/2013
ain't nuthin' sweeter than my ol' pre war Martin 000 through my mint 1970 Hiwatt 400 watt tube PA head and matching speakers. i duct taped a big ol' Charlie Christian vintage pickup right across that sound hole and boy you oughta hear that thing scream. got 3 more inputs for my squeeze box, jaw harp and kazoo too. ain't no modern shit amp ever gone beat that Hiwatt sucka
oinking pout
on 01/29/2013
hey mutha - who TF R U anyway??? U got sumthin 2 say or what???
pointing out
on 11/05/2012
Lots of rude and clueless people commenting here it seems.
Ross
on 08/17/2012
Electrons don't care about your magic wire, son. Neither does your NOS Paxolin circuit board. NOS capacitors, maybe, but the thing you call "mojo" is a symphony of parts being JUST out of tolerance enough to sound good. I'd bet that a Marshall made with modern caps measured to exact vintage values would sound identical to a vintage one.
BadBob
on 07/15/2012
Like he said Parts is parts.I use old stuff..Just like Marshall he used whatever was the cheapest and ready availible All this magic wire crap,it was the cheap that mattered
Jimsy Hendriks
on 07/13/2012
Hey guys, this is about magical amplifiers, not rubber belts. You shoulda read the goddam article before you posted that stuff. I'm gonna get Chase to build me a 200 watt Marshall Major replica so I can sound exactly like Ritchie Blackmore. Love those NOS Shuguang EL34 tubes! I have a 1968 Philips portable tape recorder with 5" reels to boost the front end for that authentic Blackmore sound. I'm bidding on a mint 1969 Strat with no middle pickup to get as close possible to that classic Blackmore sound. I'm gonna get some NOS Rotosound 9-42's and put on my black hat and rip.
jeddy boy
on 07/13/2012
C'mon Queerduck, you must be kiddin' dude, tyre's from vintage Bugatti's ain't nowhere near good as rubber from a NASCAR Dodge Charger dude, that's the only thing I use when I replace the belts on my '69 8 track player, none of this forrin s**t, only vintage made in the USA rubber dude.
Aston Queerduck
on 07/05/2012
I only use rubber from tyres taken from vintage Bugatti racing cars to make the rubber belts for my collection of priceless 1963-1969 cassette players. The superior rubber guarantees jawdropping performance every time I listen to my awesome Doris Day and Cliff Richards greatest hits compilations. I know what perfection is and I see no need to apologise for pursuing it relentlessly.
Higgs Boson
on 07/04/2012
Here be the voice of the gods, yea the link between Heaven and Earth. Listen unto Kyle lest the hand of the Lord smite thee.
beelzeBob
on 07/04/2012
Chase is real. If Kyle doesn't exist it will be necessary to invent him.



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

F40C70BE-CBA5-4E93-AD4A-3B12D270A6BB