NAD: MARSHAL SUPER LEAD 100W

To catch up!

Picked up a ’73 Marshall Super Lead (JMP era) that’s been thoughtfully modded and is in great shape. It has a Lar/Mar PPIMV master volume, an added FX loop, and otherwise retains the classic Super Lead circuit and feel. Power section is running EL34s and the amp has clearly been serviced at some point (caps, general maintenance, etc.). I’m currently running it into the speakers of a Fender Twin Reverb as a temporary cab solution, with the Marshall set to 4Ω and the Twin powered off. Using channel jumping on the inputs and keeping the loop jumpered for now. Overall tone is exactly what you’d expect from a good early ’70s Super Lead—big, dynamic, and very responsive—just getting everything documented so we’re all talking about the same setup.
 
Nice! Looks like a full rebuild though?
It’s definitely not a bone-stock survivor, but I wouldn’t call it a full rebuild either. The core stuff that matters is original — chassis, transformers, board layout, tube sockets, etc. It’s been serviced and updated, not gutted. Filter caps have been replaced, coupling caps look like high-quality mustard-style repros, and there are a few player-friendly mods (Lar/Mar PPIMV and an added FX loop). The wiring and lead dress are clean and professionally done, but it’s still fundamentally a Super Lead circuit, not a modern reissue or a ground-up rebuild. I’d describe it as a well-maintained, tastefully modded vintage Marshall rather than a collector-grade all-original piece.
 
Congrats! Very cool amp. Looks beautiful.

Heating up a space and getting loud via a cranked up tube amp is still hands down one of the best ways to spend time.

HNAD!!!
 
It’s definitely not a bone-stock survivor, but I wouldn’t call it a full rebuild either. The core stuff that matters is original — chassis, transformers, board layout, tube sockets, etc. It’s been serviced and updated, not gutted. Filter caps have been replaced, coupling caps look like high-quality mustard-style repros, and there are a few player-friendly mods (Lar/Mar PPIMV and an added FX loop). The wiring and lead dress are clean and professionally done, but it’s still fundamentally a Super Lead circuit, not a modern reissue or a ground-up rebuild. I’d describe it as a well-maintained, tastefully modded vintage Marshall rather than a collector-grade all-original piece.
Yeah, wasn't trying to diminish it, I'm sure it sounds awesome. The circuit board not being stock is what jumped out at me.
 
Yeah, wasn't trying to diminish it, I'm sure it sounds awesome. The circuit board not being stock is what jumped out at me.
Do you mean because it’s turret instead of PCB? Not an expert but I’m pretty sure 1973 is in their turret -> PCB transition period. Maybe there was something else you spotted though?
 
Do you mean because it’s turret instead of PCB? Not an expert but I’m pretty sure 1973 is in their turret -> PCB transition period. Maybe there was something else you spotted though?
Yea - I was tracking this was originally hand wired. Either way it sounds insane.
 
Based on my research, early ’70s Super Leads weren’t PCB amps in the modern sense. This is a factory hand-wired turret/tag board Marshall, which is exactly how JMPs were built at the time. Some components have been replaced and a few mods added, but the underlying construction method is original Marshall — it’s not a later PCB amp that was converted after the fact.
 
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