I’ve been a weber speaker player for over a decade. I heard about them after being frustrated by speakers like the v30 and similar, more modern Celestions, and not being able to get warmer Greenback-like sounds in a higher watt format at the time. My first Webers were a Blue Dog and Silver Bell pair. I emailed Ted Sr. and he couldn’t have been more patient or helpful with my questions. The speakers lived up to, and exceeded, my expectations and have served me well ever since.
I play several different genres, and am a professional musician, on stage and studio, and have played with an assortment of regional bands/artists ranging in styles like modern rock, funk, jazz, gospel, modern R+B and more. Like most musicians, I like to experiment with different sounds, especially via speakers. With some of my more recent work calling for a more modern sound than the warmer, vintage-inspired tone of the Blue/Silver and Legacy speakers I had been using, I decided to check out something new from Weber. I checked out the sound clips, got in touch with CJ, and ordered a pair of Gray Wolves (pre-rola, 100w, standard cap).
The Gray Wolf is every bit as good as what you hear from weber’s sound clips. Even better. Front loaded in my Soldano 4×12 the speaker has tons of character and texture, thick mids, big thumping bass, clear highs, but never sounds harsh or thin. It’s very much as Weber describes it: clean it’s eerily similar to my 50w Blue Dog, just beautiful (even with high gain amps not known for cleans!), but with more bass and just a tiny bit of hair to the tone when I dig in. When used with crunch the GW begins to distance itself just a little bit from its cousin. It’s much hairier in a pleasing way, a little more of a modern sound and feel, yet it can still easily do the vintage thing just as well as the Blue.
High gain is where the Gray Wolf really sets itself apart from the Blue Dog, Silver Bell, and Legacy speakers that I’ve used and loved for years. All of the previous Webers I own are fantastic speakers and sound great with any genre or amp that I play, but they all have a very strong vintage vibe. While there’s plenty of room to EQ what you want, that vintage tone and feel isn’t always what I’m going for (like for some modern rock or metal sounds). The GW takes the good things about those Weber speakers (as well as the good things about speakers like the v30 or h30) and blends them together in a modern sounding package. The most amazing thing is that the different aspects seem to come out on demand, almost becoming a different speaker when called upon!
When you dial in a high gain, modern rock sound the wolf unleashes the dirt without getting compressed, stiff, harsh, or bright at all! It really opens up high gain sounds, making them sound less compressed while still as dirty as you want, and again absolutely zero of the harshness or overly bright aspects one might find in a v30 or h30 type. The gray has the bass of a great h30 or 1265 type, but with much more punch and thump like the Silver, the clean chime and fat mids of a Blue, clear midrange but absolutely no harshness or honk, and tons of texture/character like a great Greenback or Weber Legacy with a touch of h30 on top. And the best part is how the speaker seems to change up depending on what you need as you play, like a mind reader! I can’t stress that enough, it is an ideal do-it-all British speaker!
Using high gain amplifiers like my Soldano SLO the Gray Wolf is exactly what I wanted. Gorgeous Blue Dog-like cleans, big low end thump, fantastic crunch and otherworldly high gain. From fast sweep playing to laid back R&B lines, choppy funk to chunky metal riffs, these speakers brought it! With all my amps, I could set the EQ anywhere and be guaranteed good sounds with clarity and punch, but no overly bright or harsh aspects whatsoever. I also took some time out to see how it recorded. I quickly put an SM57 just outside the dustcap and it recorded beautifully! Very similar to what you hear from Weber’s own clips: great lows, thick mids, excellent clarity. No hunting for the right mic position, no hassles at all.
One last thing, a shout out to CJ and the rest of the Weber folks. They have always been a joy to talk to and do business with. CJ got back to me about my questions in a little over 24 hours (must have been busy, it’s usually much faster–LOL). Weber states a 7-10 window for the speaker to be built and then shipped and mine were shipped the morning of the 9th day (which included my request for extra break-in time!). The speakers were well packed, double boxed, with retainers to hold them in place and they included some cool swag 🙂 Again, just a pleasure to deal with, every time and this was no exception!
I’ve owned and played a lot of different makes and models of speakers from Celestion, WGS, Eminence, etc. Most of them are fine, but just that – fine. They get the job done, but they aren’t anything special, nothing to get excited about.
Webers are something special. And if Brit tones are what you’re after, especially is versatility is at the top of your list, pick up a Gray Wolf.
Hello. I just read your review of the Gray Wolf speaker, and I’ve considered ordering it. I just wanted to know, if you found it to have the same muscular mid character of an older Celestion V30?
I have a Mesa Rectifier, 2X12 cab on indefinite loan to me. It sounds great, but I’ve always thought that despite the fantastic mid hump of these speakers, through a 2007 Marshall DSL-100, there’s always a bit of compression that I hear, especially in the mids. I’ve even considered changing my Gibson SG’s bridge pickup (a Gibson Burstbucker 3) to something with less mids, for more of an Angus Young tone – maybe a Manlius T-Top Replica?
Is the mid character of these Gray Wolf speakers more open than a V30? Are they more crisp, and less “heavy” sounding?
Much thanks.
To me the Gray Wolf is definitely more muscular and thick sounding than a v30 and more open in the highs and not nearly as nasal in the mid-range.
However if you are interested in the Gray Wolf email CJ at Weber and see what he recommends. If you’re after an ac/dc thing a light or medium doped Wolf or a more vintage sounding ceramic Blue Dog might be good choices.
Happy hunting!
I know this is an older post but it’s the most detailed review of this speaker I’ve seen – thank you! Question: how efficient is this speaker? Weber doesn’t publish db specs. I have a Mesa Mk V 25 but I primarily play at home and am wondering how loud this driver is.
Hi Jon
To my ear the Grey Wolf seems a bit more efficient than a standard greenback type but not as efficient as a v30 type speaker.
The cool thing to me is that it actually sounds great and very consistent at low or high volume. Once the speaker is broken in there’s an abundance of bass and full mids and the highs are crunchy and smooth (not harsh). To me it’s like the best qualities of a H30 (big bass) GB (crunch/dirt/hair) and blue (clarity and British style clean) all in one.
Like most amp and speaker combinations yes it sounds even better loud but the GW still sounds really good at low volume and doesn’t get thin and raspy (in the configuration I have). You’d have to be explicitly trying to dial in a thin sound. If you get one I’d suggest the pre rola treatment (if you plan to play at low volume to make sure there’s no harshness and it’s easy to just turn up your highs/presence) and ask Weber to really break the speaker in for you. Also I’d get more wattage than you think you need. I have several of their speakers and the wattage doesn’t negatively effect the way you might expect from other makes. For example a 75w green back from them is going to sound like a GB just a bit warmer at higher watts but doesn’t take away any crunch.
I take it you’re reviewing the ceramic?
Yep, that’s the one.
what wattage was your greywolf rated for? What type of doping did it have?
pre-rola, 100w, standard cap