Fuchs Blackjack 21 Manual
Posted By admin On 12/04/22Fuchs presents Tube Guitar Heads The Blackjack-21 MKII. If you are on the lookout for amplifier heads for guitar, amplifiers for electric guitars or guitars and basses in general, then this may be a fitting choice. Make sure to check out the reviews but first of all press the red button below to see if it fits your music taste. Enter the Fuchs Blackjack 21 MK2 that I received yesterday. Now I'm an old guy that spent a lot of years playing 100 watt amps, and I know I'm going to be skeptical whether 21 watts can do it for me or not but I'm willing to invest the money to try. I'm sure sound men will appreciate it, when we use one.
The Fuchs Blackjack 21 was a 21W, four-knob Marshall/Trainwreck-inspired rock amp with two 12AX7s and two 6V6s in a fixed-bias push-pull design. The controls were simple: Gain, Low, Mid, High. There was no master volume control. It was available as a head (19'W x 8'H x 10.5'D; 12 lbs.) or various combos: 1x8, 2x8, 1x12. It was introduced in 2005. In 2011, the original Blackjack 21 was replaced by the Blackjack 21 Mk II, which is a much different amp.I played an original four-knob Fuchs Blackjack 21 head in 2011. It did clean-to-mean with the guitar volume knob, it did fiery classic rock and hard rock tones, it had a bright, early metal-panel Marshall vibe -- I liked everything about it. Except, when I turned it up, as you must if you wish to rock, the low end got spongy/flubby/crumbly through a Dr. Z Z-Best 2x12 cabinet loaded with Eminence Red Fangs. I didn't get a chance to hear the Blackjack 21 with any other cabinets, but that Z-Best had a solid and almost too big low end when I played it with a Hughes & Kettner Puretone. I wish I could have tried other cabs, and rolled some tubes, but my suspicion was that this super-lightweight (12lbs!) head has transformers that aren't up to the task of rendering solid low end when the volume goes up. Sounds like the Fender Deluxe Reverb story all over again with higher gain. Was this an intentional design choice? Was there something wrong with the amp I played?
Fuchs Blackjack 21 Manual 2
I don't think so. Notice how Sam Vilo plays with the amp's Bass knob around 09:00. With his Greenback-loaded Bogner 4x12, that's a more than just usable tone, but modern ears like a little more low-end punch. He mostly doesn't dig in on low-string riffage, or crush a low E chord and chug on it here.
Fuchs Blackjack 21 Manual Pdf
I wanted to love the Blackjack 21 -- the power level is so well suited to the real world, and the tone was so close, except for this possible deal-breaker. When I played the even lighter (10lbs) Lucky 7, I didn't notice a similar crumbly bass, nor during my brief wide-eyed rip with a Train-45.