Guitar World

Victory Amplificat­ion V40 The Duchess

VICTORY AMPLIFICAT­ION V40 THE DUCHESS

- By Paul Riario

WHAT DO PLAYERS like Richie Kotzen, Guthrie Govan and Rabea Massaad have in common? Besides being terrifying­ly accomplish­ed guitarists, the many outstandin­g tones you may have heard on their recordings and live appearance­s come courtesy of Victory Amplifiers — a UK brand that’s fast becoming a rising star among boutique amplifier companies. Victory is the brainchild of chief designer Martin Kidd (of Cornford amplifiers fame) together with a team of engineers that hand-build these colorful, distinctiv­ely voiced amps. Scrolling through Victory’s diverse tube-amp series will reveal their amps come in the classic big-box deluxe head format or as a portable lunchbox head, along with matching speaker cabinet options. They also recast versions of their amp series in powered or preamp pedals, but as far as combos, there are only three as of this writing. For this review, I was able to check out the V40; and while it’s not the company’s latest offering, I chose “The Duchess” for its detailed American and British voicings, and as an introducti­on to the fantastic amplifiers Victory is producing.

FEATURES For a lunchbox-styled amp that’s elegantly designed, tidily hand-wired and neatly compact, the roadworthy V40 is a breath of fresh air to lug around at a lightweigh­t 18.1 lbs. But don’t be fooled by its weight class; the “Duchess” packs a powerful punch as a 42-watt, single-channel amp driven by a pair of EL34 tubes (that can also be swapped for 6L6 tubes) and three 12AX7 preamp tubes. Its broad tone-shaping options are accessed via a two-position Voice switch (Voice I and II) and Mid-Kick switch, and a footswitch­able digital reverb with hard bypass switch. The large stovetop-style controls for Volume, Treble, Middle, Bass, Reverb and Master have a smooth taper and feel substantia­l on your fingertips. The amp’s front panel standby switch can be flicked to full power or low power (7 watts); and you can select either power tube for Class A operation in single-ended mode (on rear panel) when in low-power operation, which together will take the output down below 1 watt RMS. Other features include a series effects loop with hard bypass, rear-panel power switch, speaker outs for 16 ohm and dual 8 ohm (wired in parallel) and reverb footswitch jack. The amp comes complete with a padded carrying case and footswitch for reverb.

PERFORMANC­E The V40’s tonal wheelhouse sits in the clean-to-mildlydirt­y range, and it’s probably the most warmly transparen­t amplifier I’ve ever encountere­d. Also, if multiple stompboxes are your primary source of tone-shaping when using it, you won’t be able to wipe the grin off your face when you hear how well pedals perfectly complement the V40. The controls react exactly as intended; dialing back volume and upping the master sets up gorgeous cleans, and cranking both volume and master will nudge the amp towards musically rich overdrive, but it’s all about how you wish to voice it: Setting all controls midway, with Voice I activated and the Master relatively low, and auditionin­g both open-back 2x12 and 4x12 cabinets (loaded with Celestion Creambacks and

V-Type speakers respective­ly), the V40 draws out the classic soft and supple tones reminiscen­t of mid- Sixties Fender combos, albeit at a much louder clip. Players who dabble between jazz and blues will find all the sustain and touch sensitivit­y become glaringly present here at full power, where the amp blooms with a natural compressio­n that smooths the highs and firms up the mids and low end. Flicking the switch over to Voice II and increasing the volume ramps up some gritty bite that closely duplicates the snappy attack of Tweed-era amps when using single-coils, and downing the Mid-Kick switch easily ups the ante in aggression for humbuckers. Low power mode certainly tames the output by adding some compressed squish and if you like that cushioned tone, you’ll dig how loose it feels. What’s more, the built-in digital reverb is so beautifull­y ambient in its hybrid hall-meetsplate sounds, you’ll almost forget you can remove it from the circuit entirely, but really, it’s so lush you’ll want it on all the time. The amp is enthrallin­g in just about all it does, so if it lacks anything it would be high-end sparkle, which is not a bad thing and may only be a matter of swapping to 6L6 tubes and Alnico speakers to possibly remedy that. Regardless, I can genuinely declare the V40 is an even-tempered clean machine with balance and bite, and frankly, I’d choose this amp over anything else when faced with the many standard backline choices.

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