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% This is the RIPE Database query service. Relying on Google Mobile-Friendly test is well optimized for mobile and tablet devices. Google Safe Browsing, Google Safe Search, Symantec and Web of Trust is pretty a safe domain. Please click the “Refresh” button for SSL Information at the Safety Information section.Ĭheck other websites using SSL certificates issued by DigiCert Inc. COM zone.ĭuring the last check (November 28, 2019) has See the list of other websites hosted by Exponential-E Ltd.Ī is registered under. Will speed up page load time for the majority of their users. The approximated value of is 2,417,760 USD.Įvery unique visitor makes about 2.03 pageviews on average.Īlexa Traffic Rank estimates that is ranked number 1,124 in the world, while most of its traffic comes from United States, where it occupies as high as 3,091 place.Ī is hosted by Exponential-E Ltd in United Kingdom and we recommend relocating the server to United States, as it This entry has also been posted on the AC50 traffic estimate is about 90,737 unique visitors and 184,196 pageviews per day. The same capacitor (again not on the schematic) is also found on T60 amps designated for export to the USA. That both amps were produced for export is clear from the presence of a grey 0.01uf 500v Radiospares "snubber" capacitor (not represented on the schematics) at their mains switches (positioned to the left of the choke in the AC50). It may be that the AC50 and AC100 were purchased at the same time and serviced at the same time a few years later. That amp had a Werth Surgistor fitted later too. The same seller (in Kansas) also had an AC100 "100W Amplifier" (early fixed bias, no brimistor), produced in the late summer of 1965. The amp was clearly serviced at some point in the later 1960s at a Thomas Organ Vox service centre and fitted with a surgistor-brimistor in accordance with the latest AC50 schematic. Two things of particular note - the preamp valves branded VOX and with Thomas Organ part numbers, and the presence of a Werth Surgistor (a sort of brimistor surrogate) under the lip of the preamp by the voltage selector - bottom right hand picture of the four above, far right. But we stil have the Vox amp that Barry had that was John's."Īn early solid state rectified (non-brimistor) AC50 that popped up on ebay in the summer of 2016, baffle and back board absent. So we had all this stuff, and it all went away gradually. I had the bass speaker with the bass amp on top that was Paul's.
"Barry ended up with John's Vox amps, and Vince Melouney ended up with George's amps. "What also happened was, when the Beatles stopped touring in the 1960s, we ended up with their equipment: the Vox amps and the microphones and stuff like that they used when they toured round Britain!" "The one from George is the 12-string Rickenbacker, the Shea Stadium one, which he also used on recordings."
#KEITH RELF ALAMY STOCK PHOTO MOVIE#
Years ago, what I got for my 21st birthday was a movie camera from Ringo and a guitar from George and a Monarch guitar from John ". The guitar I play on the track - but not on the video - of "This is Where I Came In" is an acoustic Gibson Monarch. MAURICE: (Smiling, nodding) "That's right. "You also got something else from the Beatles that is used on the title track and first single from your new album, "This is Where I Came In". Four Decades of Success" in Billboard Magazine, issue for March 24th, 2001. The piece, by Chuck Taylor, is entitled "The Bee Gees. Above, a grab from the page of Billboard Magazine in which the details are disclosed.