Fender Blackface Vibrolux Reverb

Model/Circuit Number: AA964, AB864, AB964
Years of Production:
1964 – 1967
Era: Blackface
Configuration: Combo
Controls: Black, forward facing w/ white labels
Knobs: Black skirted w/ chrome center, numbered 1 – 10

Faceplate

  • Front: Normal: In, In, Bright Sw, Vol, Treb, Bass – Vibrato: In, In, Bright Sw, Vol, Treb, Bass, Reverb, Speed, Intensity – Pilot Lamp
  • Rear: AC Outlet, Ground Sw, Fuse (2A), Power Sw, Standby Sw, Speaker Jack, Ex. Speaker Jack, Vibrato Jack, Reverb Jack, Reverb Out, Reverb In

Cabinet

Covering Material

Logo: None (64) or Grille mounted, raised, chrome & black script
Weight: 40 lbs.
Speaker

Effects: Reverb, Tremolo
~Watts: 35 watts
Tubes

  • Pre amp: 7025
  • Power: 2 x 6L6GC

Bias: Fixed with bias adjustment pot.
Rectifier: GZ34

Comments:

8 thoughts on “Fender Blackface Vibrolux Reverb

  • November 21, 2014 at 7:29 am
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    Bought mine (’65) back in the 70s for $130, perfectly stock. Rockinest combo amp I’ve ever owned, still sounds great. For quieter venues my ’68 Deluxe Reverb does well. I’m getting old, and helps to have some nice toys around. ’66 Telecaster through the dimed Vibrolux Reverb is heaven on earth. Kind neighbors allow me some senile moments during the day.

    Reply
  • January 29, 2015 at 11:24 am
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    Had an Ampeg ReverbRocket w tremelo in the mid-60s and moved on to a Vox AC30 2×12 in 1969-70; now wishing I had not have ever gotten rid of them — but when you’re young and dumb and think bigger is better .. then I had a late 70s Orange OR120 trade in I bought from a music store that I worked at for $175 that didnt know what they had. it was stolen a few years later right off the truck by 2 local nappy headed youths, while we were loading in our gear into a club, right off the street into the front of the club for a gig in Chicago around 1983, came back outside to get the amp and they were already 2 blocks down the street running with the 2-ton amp head between them and disappeared into a huge condemned apartment complex above storefronts — when the cops finally got there, they refused to go into the tenement, claiming it was private property, unsafe, and nobody was supposed to be living in there — and none of the squatters living there gave honest answers to the cops either.. so all was lost. And the price it would cost me to replace those 3 amps today makes me ill !!!

    Reply
  • April 21, 2016 at 2:59 pm
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    Bought my ’63 (blackface) Vibrolux some years ago, at a garage sale, for the princely sum of $150!!! WOW!!! What a steal!!!

    I am a Telecaster guy who does mostly 50s and 60s Country (what I call “rhinestone suit” music), so the Vibro is obviously just the amp for me: clean and clear, great-sounding “Grand Canyon” reverb, and the most intense tremolo I have ever heard!!!

    No need for any stomp boxes with this baby–just plug-it-in and play. YEE-HAW!!! Look out, Buck Owens!!!

    Reply
    • May 5, 2016 at 6:36 am
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      Hi Frank,
      I have owned a 1963 Vibrolux Reverb Amp for about 40 years and finally feel that it should be with someone who still plays. Do you have any advice on how to get an honest appraisal of its value? I’m in New England.

      Thanks!
      Jim

      Reply
  • January 3, 2017 at 7:48 am
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    I just purchased an all original excellent condition (pre-cbs) 1965 blackface virbrolux reverb for a little over two-thousand dollars which I believe is not a bad price. I believe the price range is from $2,500 to $3,500 depending on condition and production date.

    Chris

    Reply
  • June 11, 2017 at 8:28 pm
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    i have a 1964 fender vibrolux reverb all original but the tremolo doesn’t work. i was told to change the tremolo capacitors the.01 .01 and the.02 but i dont know what the voltage is . Can you give me some information on the voltage thanks.

    Reply
    • January 13, 2020 at 2:20 pm
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      You probably know this, but…Make sure you have the footswitch plugged in. I have a ‘64 and I owned it for about 30 years without a footswitch, assuming the vibrato didn’t work before I found that it needs the footswitch to make vibrato work.

      Reply
  • April 29, 2021 at 11:38 am
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    Weight is more like 46.5lbs for my ’66 with original Jensen C10P’s.

    Reply

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