That’s incredible. I was ready to buy that whole rig after the first 4 chords- if I could only afford it! I’ve never heard a real one solo, but these sound better than what I perceive on records; more powerful and dynamic. Those cabinets as well- your recording is awesome.
Hi. The Vox 710 was an all valve amp, as was the smaller 705. It was the 15 to 120 watters that had the solid state front en. I won't be doing any more 710s now. Possibly some 15s at a later date if I get the urge.
Hello Steve! I’m new to your channel. Do you make these yourself? They sound great! Was wondering where I could pick one up based on the Vox Ul730. I know these things must cost a pretty penny (and for good reason) so I’m thinking about setting aside some money for one. Many thanks from here in the United States!
Hi there. Thanks for the kind words. I've no plans to do a 30 watter. Would be rather tricky to squeeze it all into this size of box. Also, I've owned or worked on all the 7 series amps, from the 710 to the 7120, and the best of the bunch was the 15. Just enough for a live band and more than enough for a studio or at home.
The 15s are all sold out at the moment, I may do more later in the year or early next depending on demand. The 10s .... there'll be 5 of them in the next mnoth or two. All valve with trem and reverb. Puts out about 10 w clean, up to about 15 when really pushed.
@@SteveWalsh730When you say “all valve”, do you mean that you are not building them with solid state preamps like the Vox UL series? That’s what I had assumed they were based on because to the 710 / 715 designations.
Your amps makes the Vox sound, so SPOT on, and combined with the cabinets, its just brilliant :)
Cheers. They're great designs to base them on.
@@SteveWalsh730 Sure, but it takes skills - but it seems that you found THE recipe :)
Take care :)
That’s incredible. I was ready to buy that whole rig after the first 4 chords- if I could only afford it!
I’ve never heard a real one solo, but these sound better than what I perceive on records; more powerful and dynamic. Those cabinets as well- your recording is awesome.
Hi. The Vox 710 was an all valve amp, as was the smaller 705. It was the 15 to 120 watters that had the solid state front en. I won't be doing any more 710s now. Possibly some 15s at a later date if I get the urge.
As always, brilliantly done. :)
Love the sound from that 715
Hello Steve,
I am a new subscriber.
Welcome
Both sound great
Big sound!!! Fantastic!
I live in Baltimore Maryland USA can you put me on a list for a 715 please
Hello Steve! I’m new to your channel. Do you make these yourself? They sound great! Was wondering where I could pick one up based on the Vox Ul730. I know these things must cost a pretty penny (and for good reason) so I’m thinking about setting aside some money for one.
Many thanks from here in the United States!
Hi there. Thanks for the kind words. I've no plans to do a 30 watter. Would be rather tricky to squeeze it all into this size of box. Also, I've owned or worked on all the 7 series amps, from the 710 to the 7120, and the best of the bunch was the 15. Just enough for a live band and more than enough for a studio or at home.
Really nice…more info on them please
The 15s are all sold out at the moment, I may do more later in the year or early next depending on demand. The 10s .... there'll be 5 of them in the next mnoth or two. All valve with trem and reverb. Puts out about 10 w clean, up to about 15 when really pushed.
@@SteveWalsh730what is your website for purchasing products?
@NewtonJamesMusic no website I'm afraid. You can find me on Instagram oso_amps_and_effects
@@SteveWalsh730When you say “all valve”, do you mean that you are not building them with solid state preamps like the Vox UL series? That’s what I had assumed they were based on because to the 710 / 715 designations.
Was the head released for buying?
Not yet. These are the first finished ones of the latest batches. There'll be five of each.