What is a Fender Super-Sonic?
What is a Fender Super-Sonic?
Super-Sonic amps are the favourites of pro guitarists in many genres who love glorious Fender clean tone and expressive modern high-gain from one no-nonsense tube amp. Available in two classic looks—Black/Silver or 1961-style Blonde/Oxblood, both with ivory “radio” knobs and flowing 1960s Fender amp logo.
Where is Fender Super-Sonic 22 made?
USA
About the size of a Deluxe Reverb and broadly similar in the vintage channel, but the burn channel offers a two-stage cascading gain architecture for a wide variety of tones from bluesy overdrive to metal crunch. All-tube, made in USA, carries a 5-year transferable warranty.
When was the Fender Supersonic introduced?
2006
Fast forward to 2006, when Fender introduced the new 60-watt Super-Sonic model. You could get it as a head or 1×12″ combo. The amp offered a clean channel and—like the Prosonic—a cascading-gain drive channel.
How big is the Super Sonic 22 AMP?
The Super-Sonic 60 is built around a 22-watt all-tube amp driving a single 12″ speaker. The Super-Sonic 22 boasts a 6V6 power section that offers up a deluxe reverb-style feel with moderate output. Like its big brother, the Super-Sonic 22 can conjure everything from classic clean to face-melting high-gain tones. Why Buy a Fender Amp at Sweetwater?
What kind of AMP does a Fender Super Sonic use?
With a passel of tubes and two channels, you can dial in your perfect guitar tone. The Super-Sonic 22 is designed for serious players desiring modern high-gain tones and industry-standard Fender clean tones – and it delivers it all perfectly! The Super-Sonic 60 is built around a 22-watt all-tube amp driving…
When did the Fender Super Sonic 22 come out?
Product Specs Brand Fender Model Super-Sonic 22 2-Channel 22-Watt 1×12″ G Finish Black Blonde Year 2010 – 2021 Made In United States
What kind of AMP does a Fender guitar have?
Grab the guitar remote and zoom to today, and you’ve got the brand-spanking new Fender Super-Sonic 22. This 22-watt combo amp—which comes with either a black-and-silver covering or Fender’s 1961 blonde textured vinyl with oxblood grill cloth—has ivory “radio” knobs and the old ’60s Fender logo.