In the fall-winter catalogue of 1963, Sears debuted its 1480 line of Silvertone guitar amps. The most popular of the bunch was the 15-watt 1482, which featured a vertically mounted chassis, a 12-inch speaker, two 6V6 power tubes, two 12AX7 preamp tubes and a built-in tremolo manufactured by Danelectro. Sears sold it for $68.95 — about $700 by today’s standards.

History of the Sears Silvertone
If $700 sounds like a lot for Sears, remember that electronics were not always a given in American homes. Adjusting for inflation, the cost of a small color television set would cost almost $4,000 back in 1963. And the 1482 was still considerably cheaper than other high-end amplifiers of the ’60s, such as its most direct parallel, the brown-face-era Fender Deluxe.
The 1482 was still considerably cheaper than other high-end amplifiers of the ’60s.
The 1482 earned the reputation as a “student” model amp, something Sears sold to young, amateur players (and their parents). It was attractive for its price, but not really for its sound, which was thought of at the time as being dark, quiet and muffled. Owners of a Silvertone 1482 could thank the cheap cabinet construction for that. Sears used particle board, Fender used white pine. After flailing sales, Sears sunset the 1480 line in 1968.
