Traynor Amplifiers
Industry | Musical instrument amplification |
---|---|
Founded | 1963 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Founder | Peter Traynor |
Headquarters | , Canada |
Products | Amplifiers, speaker cabinets |
Owner | Yorkville Sound |
Website | https://traynoramps.com/ |
Traynor is a brand of bass amplifiers and guitar amplifiers, the first brand formed by Yorkville Sound. The Traynor brand, named for founder Peter Traynor, began in 1963 with the Dynabass bass amplifier, a rental product.[1][2] Traynor first became popular in Canada by providing less expensive versions of the circuits used in Marshall and Fender amplifiers of the time.[3] The revived brand now produces a wide range of electric, acoustic, and bass guitar amps.
History
[edit]In 1963 Traynor amps were designed by Peter Traynor, a music shop (Long & McQuade) repairman who had been customizing amplifiers as a way to save costs for the business. Through experimentation and experience, Traynor developed a bass guitar amplifier that he called the Traynor Dynabass. By the end of 1963, Traynor was selling the Dynabass amps along with matching 15-inch speaker cabinets, as well as Traynor portable columnar public address (PA) speakers[1][4] based on a reference book of 1930s RCA commercial loudspeaker designs.[2] Soon a business partnership to sell these amps had formed between Traynor and Jack Long, the man who owned the music store that Traynor worked at.[1] The company was named Yorkville Sound.[5]
In 1964, the Dynabass became the "Bass Master", model "YBA-1",[6] and its associated 15-inch speaker cabinet became the "YS-15". The YBA-1 "Bass Master" circuit is very similar to the Fender Bassman, which in turn inspired the classic Marshall 1959 "Plexi" amplifier.[7] The column loudspeakers were designated "YSC-1" and two additional models were created: the "YSC-2" with fewer, larger drivers to obtain more low-frequency bass extension and the "YSC-3" which was a cut-down version of the YSC-1 for customers who needed a smaller loudspeaker.[2]
Starting in 1965 with the Traynor Hi-Tone, a 2x12 test guitar amp (of which only two were ever made) Pete Traynor began experimenting with guitar amp designs. The YGA-1 (a 45 watt amp head) and the YGM-1 (a 1x12 20 watt tube combo) were the first products of this research. Full production of these amps began in 1966, and the release of new models continued until the 70s.[8]
In 1970, Traynor introduced the new Traynor logo (in the shape of a parallelogram) that was less prone to having the initial 'T' and final 'r' break off to become "rayno".[2] In 1976, Peter Traynor left Yorkville Sound, suffering from a bad back. The Traynor brand would be slowly phased out over the next 17 years until its reintroduction in 2000.[2]
In 2011, Traynor products are manufactured in Pickering, Ontario.[9]
Traynor products
[edit]In 2000, Yorkville Sound reintroduced the Traynor brand in with the YCV40 (Custom Valve) model.[10] The brand has a wide product range including DynaGain solid state guitar amplifiers, International amplifiers, Bass Master bass amplifiers, Keyboard amplifiers and an acoustic guitar amplifier line.
Traynor International Guitar Amps
[edit]This line of solid state amplifiers are inexpensive foreign manufactured solid state amps, though the TVM10 is the sole battery-operated amplifier offered by Traynor.
- TSM10 – 10-watt, 5-inch
- TGM15 – 15-watt, 8-inch
- TGM20 – 20-watt, 7-inch
- TRM30 – 30-watt, 10-inch
- TRM40 – 40-watt, 2x8-inch (2 x 20 watts x 8 inch)
- TVM10 – 15-watt, 6-inch, battery-powered amplifier
Traynor Solid State Guitar Amplifiers
[edit]This line of solid state amplifiers with tube emulation provides analog-based amplification with special circuitry to emulate the compression and dynamics of vacuum tubes. They are equipped with Celestion speakers (except the discontinued DG-65R/D models).
- 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
- DG60R – 65 Watt, Auxiliary Line Input, 12" Celestion 70/80 Speaker
- DG-65R/D – 65 Watt, Auxiliary Line Input, Eminence Redcoat Governor 12-inch speaker (discontinued)
Traynor Tube Guitar Amplifiers
[edit]- YGM-3 Reissue – Reissue of 1970s YGM-3, with tremolo and hand-wired circuitry. 20 watt class 'A' amp. 2 x EL84s, 4 x 12AX7s, 12 inch Jensen speaker.
- 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, headphone jack, DI output, and Celestion Greenback Speaker.
- Custom Valve 40 – 40 watt class AB amp. 2 x 5881s, 3 x 12AX7s, and Celestion 70/80 Speaker
- 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 50B but with blue tolex. [11]
- Custom Valve 50B - 50 watt Class AB/PP. 2 x EL34 (BSTR), 3 x 12AX7 (WA). Two channels, Reverb Accutronix, 2 way Footswitch, 12' Celestion V30, Black tolex, Black grill cloth.
- Custom Special 50 – 50 watt class AB/15 watt class 'A' amp. 2 x 5881s, 3 x 12AX7s Channel Independent Tone Control, 12 inch Celestion speaker.
- Custom Valve 80 – 80 watt class AB amp. 4 x 5881s, 3 x 12AX7s, 2 x 12 inch Celestion 70/80 speakers
- Custom Valve 80Q – Same as Custom Valve 80, but with 4 x 10 inch Celestion speakers.
- Custom Special 90 – 90 watt class AB/20 watt class 'A' amp. 4 x 5881s, 3 x 12AX7s, Channel Independent Tone Control, 2 x 12 inch Celestion speaker.
Traynor Guitar Heads
[edit]- Custom Special 100H – Selectable 100-watt/30-watt output
- Custom Special 50H – Selectable 50-watt/15-watt output
Traynor Bass Amplifiers
[edit]- YBA 200-2 – A 200 watt bass head utilizing a quad of KT88's, 2 x 12AX7s and a 12AU7.
- YBA 300 - A 300 watt bass head utilizing 12 X 6L6GC's, 2 x 12AX7s and a 12AU7.
- DynaBass 400H – A 400 watt hybrid bass head with a solid state power amplifier, and selectable solid state or tube preamp with a 12AX7 tube.
- DynaBass 800H – An 800 watt version of the DynaBass 400H.
Traynor Guitar Extension Cabinets
[edit]- YCX12 – 40-watt, 1x12" Celestion speaker.
- YCX12WR – 40-watt, 1x12" Celestion speaker in Wine Red leatherette covering.
- YCX12BLUE – 40-watt, 1x12" Celestion speaker in Blue Nubtex covering.
- YCX212 – 160-watt, 2x12" Celestion speakers.
- YCS412 – 240-watt / Angled, 4x12" Celestion Vintage 30 speakers, with versatile 4 or 16 ohm operation, or 2x8ohm stereo operation.
- YCS412V – 300-watt / 4x12-inch Angled, 4x12" Celestion G12T-75 speakers, with versatile 4 or 16 ohm operation, or 2x8ohm stereo operation.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Keenan, Edward, "Pete Traynor, Toronto’s quietly legendary sound man: Keenan". Toronto Star, May 10, 2016
- ^ a b c d e Yorkville Sound History: 1963–1991. February 20, 2002. Mike Holman. Retrieved December 21, 2008
- ^ "Traynor Amplifiers". Tales from the Tone Lounge. Archived from the original.
- ^ Yorkville Sound. Company History. Retrieved December 21, 2008
- ^ Del Halterman (1 July 2009). Walk-Don't Run - The Story of the Ventures. Lulu.com. pp. 133–. ISBN 978-0-557-04051-3.
- ^ "Liner Notes: Bullet News for May 11th". FYI Music News, By David Farrell 05/11/2016
- ^ Hunter, Dave (2005) The Guitar Amp Handbook. San Francisco, CA: Beatback Books.
- ^ Sandra Gibson (29 July 2011). Ain't Bad for a Pink: The life of bluesman Pete 'Snakey Jake' Johnson. Troubador Publishing Limited. pp. 40–. ISBN 978-1-78088-968-9.
- ^ "Pete Traynor The Man, The Music, The Struggle". Cashbox Canada, Bill Delingat, September 30, 2011
- ^ Pro Audio Review. John Gatski, August 20, 2003. Traynor YCV40 Tube Guitar Amplifier Combo
- ^ "YCV50B – Traynor Amps".