The Road Warrior, Part 1
Posted: Fri Feb 21, 2025 11:20 am
Proof that God's Grace ^ Human Generosity Exists:
I was the main repair guy for Top Ten Music, in Glenolden, PA from 1984 to 2013. My friend Chris owned the store for most of that time and his brother Dave worked there. In 1990, Dave purchased a 1972 Marshall Super Lead 100w (model 1959) amp head from Matt Bradley who had tinkered with it and just got back from touring the US with it. Matt was a talented and nice guy, but his mods sucked pretty bad, and Dave needed the amp overhauled, but being 17, was short funds. I didn't have a lot of funds myself being a couple years married but fronted him the overhaul and did some of my hotrod mods on it and told Dave he only had to pay me for the tubes and caps, when he was able. It took him a few years to pay it off, pretty much $5 at a time.
For anyone who have never experienced these amps, they are IMHO the best Marshall tone ever. The tone is squarely between a Plexi's creamy and a JCM 800's crunch. I have a client's Marshall JCM 900 on my bench and the Super Lead is double the weight, due to its superior transformers. At 100 watts into a half stack, it is also a handy paint peeler!
Fast forward to a few weeks ago, Chris texted me and told me that the amp was no longer functioning and Dave quit playing two decades ago, and he really wanted me to have the amp. I asked what I could pay him for the it and he replied, "no cost - free". I insisted on paying for the shipping and provided the shipping label, as one of my clients trades me shipping for repairs and pickups. So, this amp is now mine for the cost of a few repairs.
The lesson learned is kindness will eventually be return to you, when you least expect it.
Today I am sharing my journey with you and introducing to you 'The Road Warrior,' my new old 1972 Marshall Super Lead amp. I received her yesterday and there is something rolling around inside the chassis, so I haven't fired her up yet. I plan to make updates each step of her restoration, which will just be recovering what is left cosmetically. I will replace the broken logo.
Pics, or it didn't happen
I was the main repair guy for Top Ten Music, in Glenolden, PA from 1984 to 2013. My friend Chris owned the store for most of that time and his brother Dave worked there. In 1990, Dave purchased a 1972 Marshall Super Lead 100w (model 1959) amp head from Matt Bradley who had tinkered with it and just got back from touring the US with it. Matt was a talented and nice guy, but his mods sucked pretty bad, and Dave needed the amp overhauled, but being 17, was short funds. I didn't have a lot of funds myself being a couple years married but fronted him the overhaul and did some of my hotrod mods on it and told Dave he only had to pay me for the tubes and caps, when he was able. It took him a few years to pay it off, pretty much $5 at a time.
For anyone who have never experienced these amps, they are IMHO the best Marshall tone ever. The tone is squarely between a Plexi's creamy and a JCM 800's crunch. I have a client's Marshall JCM 900 on my bench and the Super Lead is double the weight, due to its superior transformers. At 100 watts into a half stack, it is also a handy paint peeler!
Fast forward to a few weeks ago, Chris texted me and told me that the amp was no longer functioning and Dave quit playing two decades ago, and he really wanted me to have the amp. I asked what I could pay him for the it and he replied, "no cost - free". I insisted on paying for the shipping and provided the shipping label, as one of my clients trades me shipping for repairs and pickups. So, this amp is now mine for the cost of a few repairs.
The lesson learned is kindness will eventually be return to you, when you least expect it.
Today I am sharing my journey with you and introducing to you 'The Road Warrior,' my new old 1972 Marshall Super Lead amp. I received her yesterday and there is something rolling around inside the chassis, so I haven't fired her up yet. I plan to make updates each step of her restoration, which will just be recovering what is left cosmetically. I will replace the broken logo.
Pics, or it didn't happen