🎶 Ignite Your Sound with Texas Heat!
The Eminence Patriot Texas Heat 12" Guitar Speaker delivers a powerful 150 Watts at 8 Ohms, designed for musicians seeking a warm, smooth tone with a unique blend of American and British sound characteristics, making it ideal for rock and blues genres.
C**.
Sounds amazing in a 1x12
I replaced a V30 in a 1x12 with this speaker. It's paired with a Boss Katana mkII head. The V30 was too bright and lacking lows. Couldn't dial it in the way I like. The V30 sounded great in a 2x12. Research "bass coupling". Anyway, the Texas Heat was an excellent choice allowing me to dial it in to whatever sound I desire. There's actually a lot of upper mids on tap, or it can be dialed back for more lows. Either way there's a lot of range on the eq dials. Also, a lot of mids bight overdriven without the high end fizz. This is a very good match with the Katana and probably very good with most 1x12's. Go watch "in the blues" comparison with it's brother the Swamp Thang on youtube. Highly recommended! Just be aware that the mounting holes are measured slightly different than Celestions.
H**R
All in the sound
Put these in an old Fender Super 100. Improved the sound and reduced the weight of the amp considerably. Most recommended.
M**E
Tight bass
I had a 1x12” cab with a Chinese V30 that sounded like midrange ice picks. This is a much warmer speaker. Maybe not for everyone and possibly something I might change out again later, but a definite improvement.
B**S
Good price and excellent speaker for bright guitar amps
I have a few guitar speakers that I have used throughout the years to try out in different guitar amplifiers including Celestion G12 M65 Creamback (8 ohm), H75 Creamback (8 ohm), 2002 and 2016 Mesa Boogie voiced Vintage 30 (8 ohm), EVM 12L Series II (8 ohm), and Jensen P12Q (8 ohm). I recently purchased and used the Texas Heat (8 ohm) in my Red Stripe Peavey Bandit 112, which tends to be bright or having more presence and high end than most amps. I normally use a Celestion M65 Creamback in my Peavey Bandit since it has good low end and low mid (200-400) frequency response, softer upper mids (2.5-4k) and rolls off the presence (5-7k) and high end (8k and up) and thus making it easier to dial in a full, warm, and smooth tone. The Texas Heat does what the M65 Creamback does with just a little more defined low end and just a tad less woody sound (400-500hz) which seems to allow more clarity in the mid-mids and upper-mids. IMHO, both the M65 Creamback (8 ohm) and the Texas Heat (8 ohm) are great in taming bright amps (Fender 65 DRRI, Vox AC15C1, Marshall DSL 40, etc.) and in particular providing a full, warm, and smooth tone for blues, rock, and jazz. Please keep in mind that I am referring to the 8 ohm versions of these speakers, not the 16 ohm versions of these speakers which tends to be much brighter and slightly mid scooped, and particularly in an open-back cabinet application, not closed back which tends to make speakers slightly brighter and fairly narrow in frequency response.
A**N
Solid upgrade
Have a Fender Blues Jr…. Hated it and never used it. Shrill tone that was like an ice pick in my ear. Swapped out the speaker with this one and vastly improved. Amp still wants a little compression to smooth out the rough edges, but this speaker was a solid upgrade.
I**A
UPGRADE FOR PEAVEY BANDIT
I decided to take out the Sheffield speaker in my amp. The Sheffield sounded ok, but was a bit too bitey on the top end. I put the ETH (Eminence Texas Heat) in about 5 minutes. It was a substantial upgrade. Made the amp sound 3 dimensional. I put it in a Red Stripe 2001 Bandit. The amp warmed up and the top end was clear but not harsh. I spent $250 on the amp and $100 on the speaker. It sounds better than most tube combos now. Put this next to a Mesa Boogie Combo and it blew it away. My buddies Mesa Transatlantic sounds a little better, but it is easily 4 times as much$$$ With this new speaker, my Bandit sounds much more expensive!
N**O
They shipped me a Texas Heat - not complaining
I ordered this speaker based on the price, 150 watts (using in a 1x12 combo) and based on the reviews here. What i was shipped was actually a "Texas Heat". Might be the same speaker. it is 150 watts at least and 16 ohms.I really like the sound of this speaker. I have a B52 AT-100 cab with the AT1216 speakers, and have swapped out speakers for some eminence wizards, Vintage 30's, Rocket 50's, C90 Black Shadows, and a few others over the last couple years. This speaker is much darker than the B52 speaker it replaced in my combo. The highs are less in your face, and the mids are smoother. It really does have a cardboard type sound to it - but i mean that in a good way - it tames some of the highs and high mids that can be harsh at times. This is not an overly loud speaker - less efficient than the speaker it replaced, but thats fine, as it will take all the power you throw at it, so of course it will get loud if you want it too - but if you are having volume issues with a small combo, probably not the speaker you are looking for - try a Wizard at 103.5db. Definitely some marshally mids going on here. Smooth and easier on the ears are ways i would describe it. This has me wanting to replace some other speakers with this. Would love to combine 3 of these and 1 of the AT1216's in a 4x12 cab, for a mix of bright and smooth/dark.
A**S
Superb!
I swapped out the speakers in a major Mfgers 2x12 cab which had Jensen of all brands, my ears hate Jensen, and after they broke in - SWEET CREAM baby! Holy $#@! are these killer speakers. Just got 2 more for my other 2x12 cab. Coupled with the new Roland Blues Cube Tour head and my minimal pedal chain, these speakers have brought me nearly all the way to that coveted SRV tone. KILLER btm end and mids, and no nasty hi-end freqs going on like those hideous Jensens'. And super clean when i want, which is why the blues tone head and pedals work so well now. I can now crank up all 100 watts, add base if I want, and bang on that open E flat all damn day with no flub whatsoever! just a super-loud low frequency coming through, and only the minimal distortion that I give it. I am now also finding that they record beautifully. If I had paid 2x the cost per speaker I would still be happy.
B**L
One of the best!
I purchased this speaker to replace the stock speaker in my Peavey Bandit 112 red stripe. The difference in tone was exactly what I was looking for. It removed the harsh top end and warmed everything else up. The speaker hasn’t even had time to break in and I really like the tone. I’m sure that it will only get better in time.
S**1
il suono giusto
non fatevi ingannare dalle recensioni online dove si mettono a confronto questo speaker con altri di ottima marca e qualità. io lh'ho montato sul mio peavey classic 30 ed ho trovato un'accoppiata eccezionale. suono stupendo già subito, immagino quando sarà rodato. ottimo per suoni puliti e distorti, jazz, blues, classic rock, hard rock, grunge.... ci si suona di tutto. consigliatissimo
J**R
Sound changing
Changed my seventy 80 speaker out for the Texas heat. my amp sounded better no classy crisp annoying highs. it will only get better after it is broken in.
H**N
This speaker is amazing in a Fender Mustang IIIv2
Swapped out the stock Celestion Hot 100 in my Fender Mustang IIIv2 after doing my research and the Texas Heat made ALL the difference.No more icepick highs, odd hums or digital phantoms that were beginning to drive me insane.Absolutely love it and would highly recommend this speaker to everybody using a Mustang III or IV v2, the tone difference is unbelievable. In fact this should have be the stock speaker shipped with the Mustang series.It's like a completely different amp now.Extremely happy with this purchase.
W**L
A whole lot of bass
I must say it has a whole lot more bottom end than my stock speaker in Fender Mustang 3
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 month ago