DonP1
Active Member
The gentleman selling this equipment was none other than Aspen Pittman, founder of Groove Tubes, and we spent about two hours talking about his story with tubes and amps and recording sessions, among other things. Thanks to this encounter with Aspen, I began my love affair with tube audio.
Aspen indirectly help me into tube amps. Mid 80's and into metal, I was on the quest for the ultimate guitar amp. From a Gorilla (ug) to a Peavey Classic VTX (power amp tube only) to a Marshall 4140 (all tube finally). Unfortunately, I didn't realize that this Marshall was named the "Town and Country" and was designed to compete with a Fender Twin - NOT what I was after. I have been hitting up repair shops for schematics (pre-internet), and when Aspen's Tube Amp book came out, it was like gold to me.
Using the Tube Amp book schematics, the Gorilla was gutted and rebuilt with a Marshall 2203 front end and a 50C5/35W4 power amp. Made the circuit board by etching (I didn't know what Point to Point or Turret boards were - no internet). Worked great, a little noisy (high gain with tube heaters all running in series). First I had a too-small iso-tranny, but the current was too much (ran hot) and decided to change it to hard wired.
Then I gutted the 4140 and built the first Triple Super Lead - One channel Fender clean, one channel Marshall Crunch, and one Channel Mesa Boogie lead. Schematics all from the tube amp book and graph paper. I was using mechanical relays and a 5 button foot switch. I got it all working on the first try. But there were issues. Mechanical switching had some slight popping. The channels had different levels of output feeding the power amp. And the idea of having two Presence controls foot switchable resulted in louder pops because it was in the power amp feedback circuit. But it sounded great, and was pumping 120w clean via 4 6550A's. I gutted it again to make MKII even better, but life got in the way, and it became easier just to buy rather than build.
On the guitar forums there was a note about a month or two ago that Aspen passed away in a car wreck. RIP.





(I have to play my music quieter now in order to avoid the wrath of the property management)

