My facebook status now reads: Holy Trinity Amps "TRIWATT" Batman!!!
Oh Boy!! Where to start?! I'm still buzzing from the afternoon with the Triwatt even though it ended 10 hours ago!!
OK, a couple of things up front...
Guys and gals, we are VERY lucky to have Stephen and Phil collaborating on this amp. Individually each one of these guys is a formidable talent, but together LOOK OUT - they are yin and yang, totally different approaches, but very complimentary skill sets. IMO, this amp wouldn't be the same if they both weren't involved... What a privilege to be the first person outside of the "inner sanctum" to have the opportunity to hear this thing...
Second... this amp is THE ONE. Seriously. You're ALL going to want it. It's amazing. I'll get into a detailed description of the tone below, but let's just say it's utopia for the clean guys AND it's utopia for the gain guys...
Third... I'm sorry about the clips. I suck. I'm REALLY sorry. I was SO caught up in this thing, I couldn't tear myself away to boot up my computer or set up a microphone! Yeah, it's THAT good.

I wish I had recorded though - some UNBELIEVABLE tones today... I hereby pledge to record obscene numbers of clips the next time I have the Triwatt in my studio!!
Fourth... Production Triwatt #1 is mine!!!!!

And if you think you're going to get it, you're going to have to fight me for it!!! LOL!
Enough business, let's talk Triwatt...
For the record, v1 of the amp today was fantastic. It really sounded good. But for me there are two things that make a Hiwatt a Hiwatt... or in this case a Triwatt a Hiwatt! There's gotta be lots of clean headroom that gradually turns into tight authoritative grind, and it's gotta have that "tough" quality that I've grown to love in every Hiwatt I've ever encountered. What's "tough" you ask? It's clean, but instead of "sparkle" or "spank", it sounds a bit compressed and "fast" ie the tone doesn't bloom, its attack is fast and sharp - the word I would use is it "cracks". Anyway, v1 had crazy amounts of gain, like CRAZY amounts! Don't get me wrong, I LOVE gain, like I have CRAZY LOVE for gain, but I felt the amp was missing some clean headroom. It also wasn't "fast" enough...
A little snip-snip, and swap-swap, and WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Man, v2 sounded like a crackin' Hiwatt... with some extras... more on that in a moment... To the specifics...
The bright channel was perfect right out of the gate. I like amps where the entire travel of gain knob yeilds usable tones. Bright was AMAZING from zero to dimed with lots of subtle colours in between.
Normal - v1 had usable gain for me until about 2 o'clock. Past that I didn't find the gain all that usable and it sounded uncharacteristically Hiwatt to me. After the cap was snipped out, v2 was perfect - FANTASTIC tones from the bottom all the way to the top, and again, lots of cool subtle shades of clean and semi-clean from around 10 o'clock to 3 o'clock. This channel is REALLY important because I think this is where most people will spend most of their time. Not only did the mod make the gain more usable, but it also opened up the tone, made it subjectively bigger, and perhaps even more detailed. Quite remarkable the difference actually and changed "like" to "love" for me...
Link - this is like jumpering the two channels on a 4-holer and works as advertised. I jumper the channels often with my DR103, and this input on the Triwatt didn't disappoint. There are infinite shades possible by blending the two channels. One thing that I noticed which was cool and important to me is that the actual "sound" of the inputs is different. For instance, theoretically if you turn the bright gain knob to zero and turn the normal gain up, then whether you are plugged into the normal input or the link input, it should be the same... it's not. We noticed the normal input has a bigger, open, more forward sound than the link input which is subtly more scooped-mid and sparkly as a result. This is VERY cool as it gives one set of knob settings two slightly different tones...
Treble, Middle, Bass, Presence - on my DR103 these are less like "boost/cut" knobs and more like "tone" knobs. They do A LOT to the tone, but in a very subtle way. With Fenders/Marshalls extreme settings can get painful. Hiwatt just never gets painful in the same way with extreme settings. Presence in particular is VERY authentic on the Triwatt - rather than boosting a high treble kind of thing, it seems to just open up or extend the top end of the tone without throwing gobs of pain in. With v1 of the amp, I was finding that my EQ knobs on the Triwatt were in very different places than on my DR103 when the tones were similar. After the "magic" v2 mod, interestingly, the EQ knobs were in VERY similar places on both amps dialed in to similar tones.
Master Volume - I'm one of those guys that believes optimum tone is achieved with the Master Volume wide open.

So, the first thing I do when I audition a new amp is turn that baby clockwise until it won't go any farther! The unfortunate reality of the DR103 is that sometimes I have to run the master at 12 o'clock or <shudder> less because the amp is just so damn loud!! The good news is that on the DR103, turning the master down ISN'T a tone killer like it is on a lot of other amps. I'm happy to report that the Triwatt is the same - while I would still tend to run it wide open most of the time, I didn't feel the size of the tone was really compromised until the master got under around 11 o'clock. For all you bedroom slingers, I'd highly recommend the VRM. This amp is LOUD. Really, really, really GOOD loud, but loud nonetheless. Especially with the Tone Tubbys.... more on that later...
OK... the piece de resistance (that's supposed to be french but I don't have the special accent characters!! LOL!)... the reason we all came to this party.... drum roll please... overdrive. I'll say it again - OVERDRIVE. As in the overdrive knob. This is THE DEAL. And this knob is the reason why a guy like me who owns arguably the most desirable Hiwatt there is (Hylight-era Hiwatt DR103 4-holer) would want the Triwatt. Wow. WOW. I fell so hard in love with this feature, I think it's worth the cost of the whole amp. This is where the Triwatt "art" lives. So, here's the deal: bright/normal give you one gain stage, and pull the overdrive knob out and it gives you an extra gain stage (push the knob in and it's out of the circuit). Now, I know what you're thinking boys and girls - let's gain up bright/normal and then gain up overdrive for even more drive!!! That's what I was thinking, and that's what Phil was thinking too! It certainly works, and I suggest you spend much of your remaining life span here, but no, this is not where the "art" lives. For me, what makes this amp SOOOOOOOOO special is the tones that come from "starving" the first gain stage (keep bright/normal really low - like around 7 o'clock) and then gaining up the overdrive knob. Frankly I intend to spend ALL of my remaining life span here!!! LOL!

Ok, so here's why it's so cool - the overdrive gain stage basically gives you a smoother, darker, and COMPRESSED version of the bright/normal stage. So, for rhythms, it's INCREDIBLE! If you have to play lead, bring up the bright/normal gain stage and starve the overdrive gain and the tone comes forward is more dynamic and bigger. And you can imagine all the shades in between!!! I'm not saying this lightly, but this added feature makes the Triwatt better than a Hiwatt. Seriously.
What else? Guitars. We tried most of the guitars in my studio. The Triwatt handled them all with aplomb. Tele, Strat, 2 Danos, Ric, Les Paul with P90's for the single coils, and Les Paul, SG, and my Seymour Duncan hot-rodded Fender Cyclone for 'buckers. The standout guitar with the Triwatt for me today was my new PRS Mira in both 'bucker and single mode, but every guitar sounded GREAT.
Cabs - the 70's Fane Hiwatt cab sounded fantastic as expected and really adds to the Hiwatt mojo. But the Trinity 2x12 with TTA's was CRAZY! Really, REALLY good. Those tubbies are so efficient, man that cab was LOUD!!! LOL! But really focused, detailed AND euphoric all at the same time. Maybe the best cab of the day. This is my little editorial here, not necessarily the opinion of the management, but as cool as the TT "bomb" is, you gotta hear two TTA's... I don't think the "bomb" can compare! Greenbacks in my Marshall were cool too. Stephen and Phil liked them a lot - I liked the tone, but felt the bottom end was farting out a little too early for my tastes. Also tried my Orange 2x12 with V30s - meh, a little too modern for the Triwatt methinks...
And finally, no Hiwatt/Triwatt testing would be complete without trying a few pedals (Gilmour's Hiwatt tone was largely pedals)!! Hiwatts are known for taking a lot of pedals really well. The Triwatt didn't disappoint, but I think it prefers a pedal with a more modern voicing. My TS9 Tube Screamer and my Bad Monkey sounded a little murky with the Triwatt. I much preferred a Boss Blues Driver which with a lot of amps I find too bright. The Cry Baby wah was KILLER too!!
OK, I've probably forgotten something - a lot to take in today! - but I'll chime back in if I remember something important.

Thanks to Stephen and Phil for bringing the amp to the studio, and thanks to my buddy Rob Waite for rocking the house while the other 3 of us stood around pontificating and stroking our chin beards!!

LOL!
What a great day! What a SPECIAL amp! And I'll say it again... seriously, this is THE ONE.

It's not a Hiwatt clone. It IS a Hiwatt... and a very, very, VERY cool one at that. Infinite shades of fantastic clean, and semi-clean tones - all with that fast, Hiwatt toughness. And tight, compressed, ballsy grind that makes a Marshall want to go to the gym!! Distorted tones are very rich in harmonic content also. Boy oh boy, I can't wait for all of you in Trinity-land to hear this thing...
Hope this helps.