Are you sure it's 60-cycle buzz? If so, try diagnosing what's causing it. Does it happen with no guitar plugged in? Did you try a different guitar cord? Did you try the amp in a different location? Some electrical wiring can be super noisy.
@@JoeHartRocks nothing to do with his question... I thought I would share with you an awesomeness secret with JC-120's that will give you more magic most never knew was under their hood by simply running a patch cable from the high input of ch.1 to high input of ch.2 and instrument/effects in the low input of ch.2 and be ready to be amazed at just how much voice these amps really do have. Not to mention the depth is twice of that in which you have heard her do if you haven't learned this secret already that few even know about them. To really tighten up the tone and response of these bad girls I recommend closing up the back with plywood, trust me you will have a whole other new beast of a combo like you never heard her before. A proud owner of two JC-120's myself and wouldn't trade them for the world❗🤘😁 🎼🎶⚡🎸⚡🎶🎼
Crappy review. This dude seems to be a rock or "plain chord" player. Doesn't demonstrate the unique clarity of the Jazz Chorus (e.g., R&B, funk, pop rock, reggae, etc). Additionally, the distortion--if used correctly--provides that "powdered" breakup tone used with jazz players; no clear demonstration here. Basically, you don't get to know what's possible with this amp. Yes, I admit, I listened with biased ears. This just doesn't do this amp justice.
What was the problem with the reverb??
Is that a on going problem or recurring problem???
How about trying the distortion on the Hi input ;-) Still, it's not a great sound....
It is difficult for me to record because of the hiss is very loud. Any tips?
I use a noise gate. That should help.
Hey I have a jc120 and it has a bad 60hz buzz. Any idea where to start looking?
Are you sure it's 60-cycle buzz? If so, try diagnosing what's causing it. Does it happen with no guitar plugged in? Did you try a different guitar cord? Did you try the amp in a different location? Some electrical wiring can be super noisy.
@@JoeHartRocks nothing to do with his question... I thought I would share with you an awesomeness secret with JC-120's that will give you more magic most never knew was under their hood by simply running a patch cable from the high input of ch.1 to high input of ch.2 and instrument/effects in the low input of ch.2 and be ready to be amazed at just how much voice these amps really do have.
Not to mention the depth is twice of that in which you have heard her do if you haven't learned this secret already that few even know about them. To really tighten up the tone and response of these bad girls I recommend closing up the back with plywood, trust me you will have a whole other new beast of a combo like you never heard her before. A proud owner of two JC-120's myself and wouldn't trade them for the world❗🤘😁
🎼🎶⚡🎸⚡🎶🎼
👍👍😁😁👍👍
Crappy review. This dude seems to be a rock or "plain chord" player. Doesn't demonstrate the unique clarity of the Jazz Chorus (e.g., R&B, funk, pop rock, reggae, etc). Additionally, the distortion--if used correctly--provides that "powdered" breakup tone used with jazz players; no clear demonstration here. Basically, you don't get to know what's possible with this amp. Yes, I admit, I listened with biased ears. This just doesn't do this amp justice.