This page shows two 'Power Plus' amplifiers, the Titan and Mercury, with precise specifications given on the following page. The Titan was available as a 2x15" Titan V (pictured), or 1x15" and 2x10" Titan III. The Mercury II had a single 15" and a single 10" cone. The Titan was also available as the Titan Medalist - effectively the Titan III as a combo amplifier. The Titan V really was a special amplifier with its Lansing (JBL) speaker cones, making it the most expensive amp available from Gibson at this time, and priced in line with the company's high end carved top guitars.
Gibson Power-Plus and Medalist amplifiers are products of advanced engineering and creative electronic research. These amplifiers feature professional, high power functions such as push-pull power tubes as standard equipment. The Power-Plus amplifiers allow you to lock the control chassis to the tone chamber, or operate the chassis away from the tone chamber with equal effectiveness. Medalist amplifiers feature similar electronic construction, with the Titan Medalist featuring a 15 inch bass-reflex speaker capable of reaching down to 40 cycles and a cross-over network to the high frequency 10 inch speaker. The result of such inspired electronic engineering is full power amplification in a single amplifier that can easily handle both guitar and bass.
These amps were listed in April 1966, (zone 1) at the following prices: Titan V $900; Titan III $650; Titan Medalist $600; Mercury II $525.
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