DetroitBlues Posted Friday at 03:15 PM Posted Friday at 03:15 PM (edited) I was offered a chance yesterday to visit Metropoulos Amplification yesterday. The purpose was to replace the cabinet of the Metroplex with the correct orientation. Original cabinet was an early prototype and it was built upside down. I was able to meet George yesterday and most of his staff. Very nice people and all guitar players! In a way it reminded me of how Heritage used to be. Odd collections of machinery; some in use and some covered in dust. They not only hand wire the amps, they also build their own cabinets from void-free birch plywood (9 layers deep), custom tolex, all of which is done with such pride that every detail is taken in account. In the room where the cabinets were made, there was lots of saw dust and some things covered in tarps and cobwebs. Reminded so much of the factory floor of Heritage years and years ago. There were old vintage Marshall Amps and cabinets everywhere. Plus many other vintage amps, I think I even saw a tweed Bassman. In every corner it seemed to be vintage and new speakers, guitars, and guitar cases everywhere for testing out this amps. Most of which were rather old and probably valuable. The guitars reminded me of the prototype rack that contained everything Heritage worked on including the ghost builds. i didn’t take any photos of the manufacturing areas out of respect to the company, but I did get a few photos of their demo room after asking permission. This alone was worth the price of admission… Check out this vintage Marshall amps and cabinets Edited Friday at 05:07 PM by DetroitBlues
pressure Posted Friday at 04:44 PM Posted Friday at 04:44 PM Fun tour, I have great respect for Metropoulos amps.That reminds me of Jim Ws front room. Ha.
bolero Posted Saturday at 03:36 AM Posted Saturday at 03:36 AM Lol, too funny pressure 😅 DB that's supercool! Thanks for the pics. Very impressive & looks like a fun place to explore. I see they're setup to compare the EVH stripped cab approach to regular, too
Dick Seacup Posted Saturday at 04:07 AM Posted Saturday at 04:07 AM They're near Flint somewhere, yeah? Sounds like pretty awesome customer service. I get a kick out of 'factory tours' at small businesses like that (and old Heritage). At one of the PSPs, Jim W/Alicia took me (and I think bolero) along to a powder coating company. I still have the baseball hat the guy gave me. We also hit the Bigsby 'factory' (more of a garage, really). Maybe I should swing by Metropolous and check it out (not an owner; just appreciate folks that are still actually making things). 1
Heritage1970 Posted Saturday at 06:20 PM Posted Saturday at 06:20 PM Very cool to read stories like this about great, hands on companies that really care about their products and those that use them. Hopefully they can maintain things how they currently are. Definitely makes me think though: is it possible for a company to expand and grow and still keep that "down to Earth-Mom & Pop" vibe? History leads me to say no. It's understandable that businesses want to grow and expand. That's the whole point right? I've seen numerous companies in this exact position through the years that claim they'll maintain that down home feel, but once you start getting bigger and bigger and bigger, it just seems like it's impossible to do. More employees come in, more offices, bigger facilities, etc, etc, and that all just eventually seems to squash out the "people next door to you doing business" vibe. Sad but almost unavoidable I guess....
tbonesullivan Posted Sunday at 07:10 PM Posted Sunday at 07:10 PM 23 hours ago, Heritage1970 said: Very cool to read stories like this about great, hands on companies that really care about their products and those that use them. Hopefully they can maintain things how they currently are. Definitely makes me think though: is it possible for a company to expand and grow and still keep that "down to Earth-Mom & Pop" vibe? History leads me to say no. It's understandable that businesses want to grow and expand. That's the whole point right? I've seen numerous companies in this exact position through the years that claim they'll maintain that down home feel, but once you start getting bigger and bigger and bigger, it just seems like it's impossible to do. More employees come in, more offices, bigger facilities, etc, etc, and that all just eventually seems to squash out the "people next door to you doing business" vibe. Sad but almost unavoidable I guess.... There are some companies that have chosen to stay they size they are. The growth model is not for everyone, and also comes with a ton of risks. One of those IS the loss of that feel and work ethic. Look at Soldano amplifiers: they never really grew huge, and then joined up with Boutique Amp Distribution after they had to close the factory.
Heritage1970 Posted Sunday at 10:26 PM Posted Sunday at 10:26 PM 3 hours ago, tbonesullivan said: There are some companies that have chosen to stay they size they are. The growth model is not for everyone, and also comes with a ton of risks. One of those IS the loss of that feel and work ethic. Look at Soldano amplifiers: they never really grew huge, and then joined up with Boutique Amp Distribution after they had to close the factory. That's always great to see. Rare. But definitely great and makes me want to get behind them 110%.
tbonesullivan Posted Monday at 12:05 AM Posted Monday at 12:05 AM On 1/17/2025 at 10:15 AM, DetroitBlues said: I was offered a chance yesterday to visit Metropoulos Amplification yesterday. The purpose was to replace the cabinet of the Metroplex with the correct orientation. Original cabinet was an early prototype and it was built upside down. I was able to meet George yesterday and most of his staff. Very nice people and all guitar players! Just noticed this part. Curious, how was it "upside down"? Was the rare panel attached incorrectly? Or was the vent on the bottom?
TalismanRich Posted Monday at 03:03 AM Posted Monday at 03:03 AM I wondered the same thing. It looked normal to me.
DetroitBlues Posted Monday at 11:40 PM Author Posted Monday at 11:40 PM On 1/19/2025 at 2:10 PM, tbonesullivan said: There are some companies that have chosen to stay they size they are. The growth model is not for everyone, and also comes with a ton of risks. One of those IS the loss of that feel and work ethic. Look at Soldano amplifiers: they never really grew huge, and then joined up with Boutique Amp Distribution after they had to close the factory. Handle was on the bottom and feet on the top. It was a simple mistake because it was assumed the controls were on the top edge, not the bottom.
bolero Posted yesterday at 04:49 AM Posted yesterday at 04:49 AM Probably the dumbass cabinet builder
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