Not specifically, no. But I have two Rickenbacker
guitar amps - A TR-7 and a TR-15 - that should be pretty similar. So..
Rick's TR amp series are first generation solid state amps, from the very early '70s. Solid state amps from that time are not well thought of - then, or now. Their performance was usually pretty dismal; any halfway decent tube amp could easily out-perform one. It's that bad beginning, I think, that's probably the reason so many people still don't care for them. However...
The Rick TRs are far and away the exception. The man Rickenbacker hired to design them was an electronic genius (really), and the TRs were probably the best solid state amps you could get at the time. After Rickenbacker went out of the amp business, he went on to design the better solid state ones we have today. Like I said, I have 2; and IMO, as small guitar combo amps go, they definitely can hold their own against anything you can get new today. Played through the TR-7, with a little reverb and delay, my Rick 330 guitar is a jangly Surf Rock monster; the sound is unbelievable.. If everything works as it's supposed to, that is not a bad price at all. TR bass amps are pretty darn scarce; much more so than the guitar amps (and even they are thin upon the ground..).