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The sound of the summer has a citrus flavour with a kick, as we bite into a new Orange that rocks.
Chris Vinnicombe, Tue 23 Oct 2007, 12:08 pm UTC
Whether it's the classic British tonality of the popular AD series, or custom shop über-heads such as the Retro 50, Orange's amplifiers have confirmed devotees amongst the highest echelons of rock's elite.
The 'verb-less Rocker 30 is a stripped down 30-watt amplifier, powered by a pair of EL34 power valves running in Class A, and available in head and 1 x 12 combo configurations.
OMEC tells us that the Electro-Harmonix 6CA7 will soon replace the stock EL34 as their power valve of choice because their designers believe them to be the finest EL34 variants on the market.
While you might reasonably expect a pair of these valves to generate 50-60 watts in class AB, as they are operating in Class A, this is limited to around 30.
The Rocker 30s feature the same transformers as those used in the AD30TC twin channel head and combo, although most similarities between the models end here.
One fairly fundamental difference is the presence of solid-state, rather than valve, rectification, which should contribute to a noticeably less compressed and 'spongy' attack.
The Rocker 30's Natural channel is controlled by just one volume pot and features a single-stage preamp incapable of preamp distortion, so any break up on this channel is pure power amp drive.
The Dirty channel, meanwhile, is a scaled-down version of the lead channel on the bigger Rockerverb amplifiers. Featuring three gain stages rather than four, it should allow for an expanded low-gain vocabulary from a channel that gets very dirty indeed.
While the Natural channel is about as straightforward as valve amplification gets, the Dirty channel benefits from the relative luxury of individual channel volume and gain controls, along with three-band EQ.
Cosmetically the head is standard Orange fare – although in common with the bigger Rockerverb models, a new three-way toggle power switch includes a middle standby setting to save space on the front panel.
This leaves room for more ornamental features such as quirky graphical representations of each control on the panel. These contribute to that unmistakeable funky vibe and hark back to the days of fists and mountains denoting function.
Externally, the head is identically proportioned to the AD-series models and 40mm shallower than the Rockerverb heads.
Along with the Rocker 30 head, you may have noticed amongst the visual feast on these pages the new Orange 1 x 12 extension cabinet, the PPC112.
Like all new Orange cabinets, it features rugged 18mm birch ply closed-back construction – thankfully with no MDF in the equation.
As always, we are reminded that this is a company that really knows how to build speaker cabinets properly.
The single 12-inch speaker inside is, as expected, a Celestion Vintage 30, and something about the mid-range character of these high quality drivers seems to fit the current wave of Orange amplifiers perfectly.
Anyone who has experience of gigging and recording with an Orange AD-series 30-watter will know that not only can this company produce amps that sound magical live and on tape – they also have just the right amount of power for most applications. So we fired up the Rocker 30s with high expectations…



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Great tones!
No footswitch included.
A fantastic sounding amp at a reasonable price.
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Rocker 30 Head