Le Supersonic c'est 22 Watts non ? Comme le DeluxeReverb 65 et 68...
Sinon c'est pour ça que je te conseillais Rivera, le Master est vraiment bon et tu peux jouer avec un joli clean à un volume tout à fait raisonnable (ce qui est en général plus dur avec les Fender qui sont beaucoup moins progressifs).
Autre chose : je crois me souvenir que le SuperSonic était décrié par certains pour des problèmes de souffle trop présents et de craquements suspects. A vérifier si tu te tournes vers ça.
EDIT : en fait plus je te lis plus je me dis... RIVERA. Mais bon, je veux pas insister lourdement, j'ai pas d'actions dans cette boîte
Quelqu'un qui en parle mieux que moi (mais en anglais) :
Citation:
Rivera amplifiers tend to be known for their high gain rock capabilities, but that is only half of the story. Most Rivera amplifiers are channel switching, and the clean side clearly emulates the Blackface school of design (Rivera founder Paul Rivera Sr. was at Fender in the early 80’s as their marketing director). Rivera clean channels have plenty of clean headroom, volume, and that sparkly, glassy sound so familiar to Fender lovers. Rivera uses 6V6, 6L6 and EL-34 tubes for their products, and does not use the EL-84 (the EL-34 is clearly not a “Fender” tube, but great for hard rock). Rivera also uses solid state rectification, which boost the clean headroom of the amplifiers. The Rivera Venus series combines Class A operation with the classic Blackface sound resulting nice tight tones with a hint of warmth around the edges. The gain side of Rivera amplifiers is voiced much more in line with would could be described as a classically “British” tone with lots of distortion, thick mids, and a tight bottom end. With ample tone shaping capability and often a “pull boost” knob, Rivera amplifiers can also crank out that scooped midrange hard rock grind popular in a lot of music including modern Nashville country, which these days is essentially the new Pop Rock. Or as a friend of mine puts it, “Recto-Country.” To generalize, Rivera is best described as Fender Clean/British Grind, combining two of the most classic sounds in Rock ‘n Roll.
http://www.upfrontguitars.com/(...)-you/
Ou encore :
http://www.thegearpage.net/boa(...)0169/