A vintage looking guitar amp.
In the 1920s, it was very hard for a musician playing a guitar to find an amplifier and speaker to make their instrument louder as the only speakers that could be bought wereradio horns of limited frequency range and low acoustic output. The cone speaker, widely used in 2000s-era amp cabinets, was not widely offered for sale until the 1930s and beyond. The first amplifiers and speakers could only be powered with large batteries, which made them heavy and hard to carry around. When engineers developed the first AC mains-powered amplifiers, they were soon used to make musical instruments louder.
Louder and vintager is what I wanted when I was creating this model of a guitar amplifier. Back when I started learning how to play the guitar I got one of these and it has been with me ever since. It has been around 14 years now. There really is nothing like the feeling of picking up the guitar, connecting the jack into the amp and turning up the volume on the guitar. That urge is what I feel when I look at the renders and It makes me happy.
You'll get:
The Guitar Amp model fully UV Unwraped with materials assigned for each segment of the model on a single UV Map. This will allow you to import the model with ease for any of your projects. All textures are 2048x2048.
Not only the model .fbx file, the model .obj file, the model .Stl file and it's textures in a .rar file but also the original .blend file in which you can tweak, or fine tune to your needs to add any branding or hard-surface details as you see fit.
A .sbs (Adobe Substance Painter) file is included in case you need to perform some changes to the textures, or you need to export them at a higher, or lower resolution (the current resolution is set at 2k).
This project was done using the most up-to-date version of Blender, which is currently version 3.40.
!beep! Mr. Vault signing off! !beep!