
One less Z -- a TON more savings! Find gently used, blemished, and resealed gear at blowout prices. Hurry -- quantities are limited!

One less Z -- a TON more savings! Find gently used, blemished, and resealed gear at blowout prices. Hurry -- quantities are limited!
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"Another fantastic purchase from zZounds! Exactly what I was looking for and the option to make payments is great! Always happy with this company and their shipping is so fast!"
Search Results
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Friedman ASC12 Modeler Monitor Powered Guitar Speaker Cabinet (1x12", 500 Watts)
With a 500 watts pushing a 12" Celestion speaker and a high-frequency driver, the Friedman ASC12 powered cabinet brings your digital modeling amp to life.
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Victory V112-V Compact Guitar Speaker Cabinet (60 Watts, 1x12 Inch)
Loaded with a versatile Celestion Vintage 30 speaker, this Victory cab handles the job for most amps. The modern voicing suits cleans and high gain alike.
$799.95
- No Credit Check6 x$133.32
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Blackstar HT V MKIII A Speaker Cabinet (4x12", 320 Watts 16 Ohms)
Pair your Blackstar HT MKIII head with this speaker cab for an impressive presentation. Four Celestion Seventy 80 12-inch speakers handle up to 320 watts.
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Bad Cat Lynx Speaker Guitar Speaker Cabinet (120 Watts, 2x12")
Pair your Lynx head or combo with a complementary cab for a formidable stack anywhere. This closed-back cab boasts a pair of Celestion Vintage 30 speakers.
$849.95
- No Credit Check6 x$141.66
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Bad Cat Hot Cat Guitar Speaker Cabinet (120 Watts, 2x12")
Ensure your Hot Cat amp absolutely smokes with this matching 2x12" cab. A pair of Celestion Vintage 30 speakers handles 120 watts and offers a modern sound.
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Victory V212-VB Celestion Gold Guitar Speaker Cabinet (100 Watts, 2x12)
Designed to match the VC35 The Copper head, the V212-VB packs a Celestion G12M Greenback and a G12H Anniversary, delivering sweetness and color to your tone.
That said, pairing an amp head with a speaker cab doesn't mean you need to go huge. Increasingly, modern guitarists are building separate-head-and-cabinet rigs to get more control over their tone. With a stack, you can swap out either your amplifier or speaker cabinet to take advantage of different tubes, speaker drivers, amp types, and different combinations of wattage and impedance. You can also add an extension cabinet to project your amp's sound farther, and get better dispersion on stage. This type of mixing and matching requires some technical knowledge, but can ultimately be your ticket to the Tone Zone -- and a way to build up your own customized collection of components for any situation.
From the instantly recognizable aesthetics and mid-range tonal bite of Orange and Marshall cabinets, to the classic vintage-vibe sounds of Fender and Vox, to higher-gain brands like Randall and EVH, the options out there for electric guitar cabinets can be a little overwhelming. You could go all-Orange for a fuzzy, British drive, or go all-Fender for bright, chiming clean sounds -- but you don't have to stick with all one brand. Try open-back cabinets for bright, up-front tone with a lot of presence, or plug into a closed-back cab for more low-mid bark and thicker bass.
As far as speaker firing angle, there are straight and angled cabinets -- pioneered by Marshall for The Who in the 1960s -- which aim the sound slightly upward toward the guitarist's ear for convenient stage monitoring. Speaker size (8" vs. 10" vs. 12"), impedance, cabinet construction material, and stereo/mono capability are just a few more of the specs you may want to consider when shopping for the perfect guitar cab. As always, feel free to call our Gear Experts at 800-460-8089 with any questions related to amp and speaker combinations.