About This Listing

Welcome to TC Gakki! All photos are of the item for sale. Please note they are for sale in our store and may sell out. Thank you for looking! Feel free to ask any questions!

Product Details
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The sound is a vintage, good handling, and a gem with excellent practicality ♪ Princeton-AMP is easy to handle. This machine manufactured in 1964 has replacement of speakers and parts, but outputs a dry and dry fender sound. It is one recommended as a practical amplifier ♪

Age: 1964

Accessories: Cover (general -purpose)

* Many parts replaced

* The warranty period is one month from the date of purchase.

[Purchase (trade -in) is now strengthening! ! ] We will buy all expensive products, such as current popular products, expensive boutiques, rare minor systems, etc.! If you are thinking about disposal right now, or if you are wondering about the assessed value of other stores, please contact our shop once!
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Please note that all items are for sale in our Tokyo store.
There is a chance they might be sold out. All items are shipped tracked and insured. All import duties or customs fees are the buyers responsibility - please be aware of the requirements for your country. If you have any questions please ask.

Listed7 months ago
Condition
Brand
Model
  • Princeton 12-Watt 1x10" Guitar Combo
Categories
Year
  • 1964
Model Family
  • Fender Princeton
Speaker Configuration
  • 1x10"
Electronics
  • Tube
Series
  • Fender Vintage Black Panel Amps
Reverb
  • None
Model Sub-Family
  • Fender Princeton Amp
Color Family
  • Black

About the Seller

TC GAKKI

Shinjuku-Ku, Japan
(1,997)
Joined Reverb:2018
Items Sold:3,656
Product Overview
The Black Panel Fender Princeton Amp ("non-Reverb") is a highly sought-after vintage guitar combo, perfect for small clubs and recording studios. With built-in tremolo/vibrato circuit and 12 watts pushing a 10" speaker, the Princeton was something of a middle-ground between the smaller Vibro Champ and the bigger Deluxe Amp. The earliest Black Panel Princetons have a couple anomalies -- the "tuxedo" cosmetics from using leftover Brownface parts and a simpler Tone circuit. By the fall of '64, the more common Black Panel-era cosmetics (numbers on the knobs, not the faceplate) came about and the circuit was revised to have separate controls for Bass and Treble.
Shop 4 options from $2,799
Product Reviews

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