Traynor Amplifiers
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Traynor Amplifiers is a Canadian company—a sub company of Yorkville Sound—which designs and manufactures musical instrument amplifiers. After fading out of existence, Yorkville Sound reintroduced the Traynor brand in 2000 with the YCV40 (Custom Valve) model.
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[edit] History
Created by Peter Traynor who worked as the repair technician at the original Long & McQuade music store in Toronto during the 1960's, Traynor started out by making custom PA systems. He built a customer a pair of column speakers for PA use. They were covered in purple tolex. Other customers seeing these items waiting to be picked up placed orders for columns of their own. Jack Long owner of the Long & McQuade music store noticed Pete's creativity and industrious attitude, together they formed a small manufacturing company and named it Yorkville sound. Yorkville Avenue a sidestreet near store was the center of Toronto's exploding 60's music scene. Soon the product line blossomed into a line of guitar and bass amplifiers. There were quite a few models produced, but the most popular were the 'simple' Fender, Marshall clones. Like most Canadian manufacturers of the day, Traynor used Hammond transformers and Marsland or RSC speakers. The amps became famous for their durability, as Pete Traynor drawing on his repair background sought to engineer amps that would withstand real world use and abuse. Pete Traynor would regularly test new products for durability by throwing them from the roof of the store. He would replace the tubes and if the amp still worked it was built well enough for customers. Today, these older amplifiers don't command nearly the price that an equivalent Fender, Marshall will on the used market, though prices have been rising as more players realize the original YBA-1 used the same Wester Electric designed circuit as the legendary Fender 5f6a Bassman, and Marshall JTM45 amplifiers. [1] Eventually, Yorkville evolved into a major supplier of mid sized P.A. equiptment. Production of Tube amps ceased when it looked like solid state amps would take over the market. Due to customer demand the Traynor name and Traynor production of tube amps was revived, and continues to this day.
[edit] Current Production Traynor Amps / Cabs
Traynor's return to producing full tube amps occurred at the end of 2000 with their YCV (or Custom Valve) line. Although the YCV line takes main stage, Traynor has a wide product range including DynaGain Solid State guitar amps, International Amps (inexpensive foreign manufactured solid state amps), BassMaster Bass Amps, Keyboard Amps and a Acoustic Guitar Amp line.
Traynor Tube Amplifiers
- Custom Valve 20 — 15 watt class 'A' amp. 2 x EL84s, 3 x 12AX7s, 12 inch Celestion speaker.
- Custom Valve 20WR — Same as Custom Valve 20 but with red tolex, cream grill cloth, and Celestion Greenback Speaker.
- Custom Valve 40 — 40 watt class AB amp. 2 x 5881s, 3 x 12AX7s
- Custom Valve 40WR — Same as Custom Valve 40 but with red tolex, cream grill cloth, Celestion Vintage 30 speaker.
- Custom Valve 40T — Same as Custom Valve 40 but with 2 x 10 inch Celestion speakers.
- Custom Valve 50BLUE — Same as Custom Valve 40 but with EL34 tubes, blue tolex, black grill cloth, and a Celestion Vintage 30 speaker.
- Custom Valve 80 — 80 watt class AB amp. 4 x 5881s, 3 x 12AX7s, 2 x 12 inch Celestion speakers
- Custom Valve 80Q — Same as Custom Valve 80, but with 4 x 10 inch Celestion speakers.
Traynor Solid State Guitar Amplifiers
- DG10 — 10 Watt, Auxiliary Line Input, 8" Celestion™ Speaker
- DG15 — 15 Watt, Auxiliary Line Input, 10" Celestion™ Speaker
- DG15R — 15 Watt, Auxiliary Line Input, 10" Celestion™ Speaker
- DG30D — 30 Watt, Auxiliary Line Input, 12" Celestion™ Speaker
- DG-65W — 65 Watt, Auxiliary Line Input, Eminence Redcoat Governor™ 12-inch speaker
Traynor Extension Cabs:
- YCX12
- YCX12WR
- YCX12BLUE
- YCX212
[edit] References
[edit] Links
- Traynor Amplifiers — Official Website
- Yorkville Sound — Traynor's parent company, Official Website
- Tales From the Tone Lounge - Traynor Amps
- Velvet Black — Site dedicated to old Traynor amps