| Well, in order for this model to be 180 watts, it would have to
have about 8 6L6GC's or use a differant power tube altogether.
I'd hate to have to retube an amp that requires 8 6L6's. You'd
never find 8 "matched" tubes. 8 6L6's would set you back almost
$200.00, and that doesn't include preamp tubes or drivers.
If indeed the super-Twin had 8 6L6's in it, I'd also hate to have
to lug the thing around. God knows Twins are heavy to begin with.
Around the same timeframe Fender also made the "Fender 75" which
was reputed to have reliability problems, and had a really weird
set of controls. I demoed a "75" once, and it had like 4 differant
volume controls all affecting gain at the same time.
I think the late 70's/early 80's was a period when Fender's design
engineers were experimenting with hallucinogens. Most of the products
they designed at that time were flops in the market for good reasons.
The only Fender amp from that period that I have heard good things
about is the Super-Champ.
Mark
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| Kevin,
The Fender Super Twin,with 180 watts,had 6 6L6's,had a typical
Fender frontend,with 6 band Eq,5 preamp tubes,solid state power supply.
It also had some sort of internal distortion circuit,spring reverb.
I'd take a guess that maintenance and repair would be costly.......
Rick
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