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Grab it before it's gone
Only 1 left
Grab it before it's gone
*Excludes Brand New, B Stock, Fair, Poor, and Non-functioning. Prices exclude shipping and tax/VAT/GST.
The Orange Amplifier brand was resurrected in the '90s to the excitement of vintage British fans, but it put itself on the map all over again when it released the Orange Tiny Terror amp in 2006. For a long time the realm of small, portable, great-sounding amps was the exclusive domain of boutique and custom builds. So when Orange Amps produced a small, metal-cased amp head that provided versatile tube tone for under $600, it spurred a range of competitors to answer, most notably Vox with the Night Train. The Orange Tiny Terror, however, remains the original and the most fun in its simplicity and design.
Read more about Orange Amplifiers through our interview with Adrian Emsley here.
With only two switches, three knobs and one input jack, the Orange Tiny Terror could be mistaken for a toy with its picture labels and simplicity. After trying it out though, the basic layout is liberating. Flip the on switch. Choose 15 or 7 watts (stage or studio). Choose how loud you want to be. How bright you want to be. How much dirt you want. And you're ready to go, without having to spend tons of time dialing in or pre-setting multiple channels.
This is an amp that begs to be played with the guitar plugged directly in, with no effects pedal interference. It has plenty of headroom and a warm, organic breakup that runs the gamut from blues to classic rock and even metal. It does not have any onboard effects like reverb or tremolo, so players looking for those will need to bring a few pedals along. And the Tiny Terror will happily play along, pairing with pedals as well as any high-end amplifier.
The Night Train still uses a four-tube chassis with a solid state rectifier, just like the Tiny Terror, but differs slightly in that it has see-through metal casing, two output jacks instead of three and separate treble, middle and bass knobs in place of the single tone knob on the Tiny Terror. Both amps can switch from 15 watts to 7 watts (technically 7.5). The Night Train is a little heavier (17 lbs. vs 13 lbs.) and larger, but you're right to think that these two amps are fraternal twins. It really is just a matter of aesthetics and opinion once you narrow your choice down to these two. Keep in mind that the Tiny Terror made the market first.