It's certainly a worthwhile thing to do.
At the expense of wreaking a perfectly good amp.
You want to build a Marshall, fine, but don't wreak a nice Traynor. If the amp was already trashed, beat up, then ok, but not 1 that's in pretty good shape to great shape.
There's plenty of Marshall's out there, we don't need to convert other good amps to be another Marshall.
It's 2025 and these amps are 50+ years old and are fairly common, not terribly valuable collector's items. Most if not all of them are going to need work to keep them working so they are by definition not going to be stock after the fact.
It's really getting tiresome seeing these kinds of takes.
Really, what's it to you? Do you have stock in the company or something? Whatever happened to "live and let live?"
It's his amp, he can and should do
whatever he wants with it and as a fellow Traynor owner I will only encourage
never discourage him to fully realize the possibilities of this/these platforms.
Stock they are reather decent sounding, but nothing to write home about. Pete and crew in all of their wisdom designed these to be rental and bass amps that were/are damn near bulletproof.
They are glorious sandboxes. They are handsome heads with durable chassis and huge, monstrous transformers bolted to them. Inside is a generic turret board that was placed inside a variety of YBA models of the era. To me, it represents a world of possibilities and potential.
Please feel free to do whatever you want with this OP and nevermind the naysayers, ever.
I have spoken.
