

Personally owned this guitar since 1990 (for the past 25 years). Very low serial number, thus I'm fairly certain it's from 1967, although itĬould possibly be 1968 at the very latest. They were only made from 1967-1969 & this one has a You will not be disappointed with this guitar.ĭoesn't seem to be any way to know the exact year of manufacture for these The action is great, the neck is perfect, & before listing it, I just put new GHS Boomers (.009's) on it. The Bigsby vibrato & Kluson tuners all work perfectly. The DeArmond pickups sound absolutely amazing! All electronics work perfectly, as does everything on the guitar. To my knowledge everything on this guitar is original. Both the Delta and Beta get good reviews (see above), worth looking.Phenomenal, collectible condition, especially considering that it's nearly 50 Sealed might be better w/those as well as the Beta's, another fav for vintage replacements. I can't comment on the Deltas myself, no experience with them, but it looks to me they like a pretty big box if they're ported.

They're likely run you over 200 a piece these days, though. The stock cap values are just OK, you could add more, though much over 10,000 uF is diminishing returns for the amount of power that amp generates. Personally I would not match Celestions with that cab, just from my general opinion of Celestion 'sound'. I put Eminence Delta 15's in mine (after somebody stole my JBL's which I had taken out at the time), they sounded good in that cab. That cab (which appears to be actually from a later K250 rig) sounds best with JBL D140F's or similar speakers. And remove the 'death cap' and put in a 3-prong power cord. Can these be used in a bass amp cab? For starters, recap that amp before playing out much with it.those old power supply caps (the big silver cans at the bottom of your last picture) are far past their prime. The amp is plenty loud as is, I think, but I did notice that Partsexpress has some factory sellout Celestion 15-inch woofers for a decent price, and I'm wondering if they would work in my cab.
VINTAGE KUSTOM AMP SERIAL NUMBERS FULL
If I can put two 8-ohm speakers in there, it will do the full 100w RMS at 4-ohms. I understand this will use ~65 watts RMS. I have one cab, with two 16-ohm speakers in it. Where can I get out put transistors for my kustom 250g guitar amplifier 1970/71 vintage (or cross at least reference pages). For sale now we have a Kustom K150-7 2x12 Guitar amplifier. You'll find new or used products in Kustom Vintage. The model number indicates the chassis used-with a higher number denoting more features-and repairmen relied on these numbers to know what chassis they were working on. Model numbers are normally found on the serial-number plate located on the back of the amp, and they range from 1 to 8. These amps were designed to use 2 cabs at a 4-ohm load. Last week I nabbed a cool Kustom Tuck N Roll bass amp.
