Bassnut62 Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago HI all, I recently got a Phil Jones BG-110 20w 2x5 combo for practice at home and am SO impressed with it. I am now tempted to get a full Phil Jones rig. Maybe just one of their powered monitors to amplify the BG-110 or maybe a bigger combo. I'd use it for small to medium size gigs and maybe recording too. I am thinking of getting power up to 250w or 500w. I want to know: How well they stand up to fat bass tones (from a '79 MusicMan Stingray or an AVRI62 Jazz Bass)? How well they cut through a mix on stage? Whether they have enough headroom to cope with small-to-medium gigs? What are your thoughts and experiences of Phil Jones gear? Thanks. Quote
Dan Dare Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago I had a similar experience to yours - bought a small PJB combo, liked what it did and decided to try a full rig. You can certainly do it, but it won't be cheap. They will deal with fat tones happily, but you'll need a few of those small drivers to shift enough air in a live situation. The good news is that they often come up used and, as they are often bought by jazzers and non-headbangers, they are usually in good shape and have not been caned. They cut through very well on stage in my experience. However, I am playing in a soul band and doing functions, pubs and clubs. I am not competing with heavy-handed drummers or guitar players. Your situation may be different. They also project well into a room. I used to play in the house band at a local jam night and it surprised me how well my two PJB 4x5 cabs filled the space when I listened to others playing. If you want to make a bit of noise, especially with fat, low-end heavy tones, you will need a few drivers as I mention above. I have five 4x5 PJB cabs and run three or more of them when I want to shift some air. They are inefficient, so you will need powerful amplification. If you buy the PJB powered cabs, that will be taken care of, but if not, you need at least 250W per 4x5 cab to get them singing. I'm not so keen on PJB amps. I find them a bit too hi-fi. I use Aguilar and/or Carvin amps, plus a PA power amp if needed, which give me the warmer, more old-school tone I prefer. Quote
Bassnut62 Posted 45 minutes ago Author Posted 45 minutes ago Quote Hi Dan, Thanks for your very helpful reply. I am mostly playing Soul, Funk, Americana, Blues, even some Country and some Reggae, with a hint of Rock now and again, and mostly small local gigs. So it sounds like the bigger PJB powered combos and active monitors will do the trick well. I am not interested in just a PJB amp. I currently run an old Bassman rig with a big old 15" alnico JBL D140 in the (actually MusicMan) cab; so reckon the PJB gear would be a lot easier to wield, especially as I'm in my 60s now! Coincidentally, I had been looking at the Aguilar TH amp and cabs too, and like their sound. How do you think the PJB compares to the Aguilar? It would be sad not to have cooking valves for bass anymore, but it may be time to join the modern world! And I still have some nice old valve amps for guitar anyway. Quote Quote 6 minutes ago, Dan Dare said: I had a similar experience to yours - bought a small PJB combo, liked what it did and decided to try a full rig. You can certainly do it, but it won't be cheap. They will deal with fat tones happily, but you'll need a few of those small drivers to shift enough air in a live situation. The good news is that they often come up used and, as they are often bought by jazzers and non-headbangers, they are usually in good shape and have not been caned. They cut through very well on stage in my experience. However, I am playing in a soul band and doing functions, pubs and clubs. I am not competing with heavy-handed drummers or guitar players. Your situation may be different. They also project well into a room. I used to play in the house band at a local jam night and it surprised me how well my two PJB 4x5 cabs filled the space when I listened to others playing. If you want to make a bit of noise, especially with fat, low-end heavy tones, you will need a few drivers as I mention above. I have five 4x5 PJB cabs and run three or more of them when I want to shift some air. They are inefficient, so you will need powerful amplification. If you buy the PJB powered cabs, that will be taken care of, but if not, you need at least 250W per 4x5 cab to get them singing. I'm not so keen on PJB amps. I find them a bit too hi-fi. I use Aguilar and/or Carvin amps, plus a PA power amp if needed, which give me the warmer, more old-school tone I prefer. Quote
ra0ulduke Posted 2 minutes ago Posted 2 minutes ago I really like the concept of the Phil Jones combos. Am I correct in understanding that the 450/250 watt model with the 5" speakers is the most powerful? Are 5" speakers really big enough for a live performance? Quote
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