Showing posts with label combo amps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label combo amps. Show all posts

6/21/2012

Acoustic B200 200W 1x15 Bass Combo Review

Acoustic B200 200W 1x15 Bass Combo
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is a very nice item. Specially for its price.
If you think it will suck, then you're definetely wrong.
It has a nice eq power and it's very loud for it's 200W RMS. I'd recommend it for small to medium sized gigs and to jam.
It has a nice vintage sound, and the built-in horn gives you the treble you want in a nice proportion.
I'd definetely recommend it for it's price. You may find better thing with more money, but you'll have a hard time searching for a quality like this in this price.
Definetely recommend it

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The Acoustic B200 professional combo is designed for large club and live applications where the sound of its 15" bass driver and horn will fill the stage with warmth and punch. That's because it pounds a massive 200 watts RMS into the internal 15" speaker, delivering the classic Acoustic sound in a portable, professional design. The two bass inputs are designed to accommodate both active and passive bass instruments while the Gain and Volume controls give you complete control over the character of your tone. Increase the gain for some old school rock tones, or lower it and turn up the volume for great clean, classic or funk tones. The preamp includes very natural and tube-like compression as well as a harmonically rich distortion circuit, which keeps your tone musical—even at high volume levels. The B200 also includes a notch filter to tailor your mids, and a six-band EQ for exact control over every nuance of your basss tone. Rear panel features include a parallel Effects Loop, tweeter on/off switch, and XLR balanced Line Out with Level Control and Ground Lift. The series extension speaker jack provides an output for an additional cabinet such as the Acoustic B115 or B410. The heritage of Acoustic comes through loud and clear in the B200--a seriously professional amp for serious bassists.

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6/18/2012

Bugera 333 120-Watt 3-Channel Valve Amplifier Head with Reverb Review

Bugera 333 120-Watt 3-Channel Valve Amplifier Head with Reverb
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Well after hearing all the bad hype surrounding this amp I had some doubts that it would live up to my own standards. You hear all kinds of stuff about Bugera, but I'm here to tell you not to pay any attention to the negative comments. The tone this amp produces is way beyond what I expected, and certainly stands up to any other high gain tube amp out there. It doesn't matter what style you may be, this amp can do anything.
Buy it and prove me wrong.(Just kidding) Anyway, I recommend getting the amp if you can, you won't be disappointed.

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Boutique-Style 120-Watt 3-Channel Valve Amplifier Head with Reverb

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6/17/2012

Acoustic 260 100W 1x10 Bass Mini Stack, Black Review

Acoustic 260 100W 1x10 Bass Mini Stack, Black
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I bought this amp to begin practicing with a band for the first time. It sounds great and is loud enough to be heard over the drums while practicing in a garage setting. It runs quiet and has a toasty tone. Who can pass up a tiny stack?

Click Here to see more reviews about: Acoustic 260 100W 1x10 Bass Mini Stack, Black

With an overall height of just over 29 inches, the Acoustic 260 Mini Stack is a pony-sized bass amp that pumps out amazing volume and tone. Perfect for small stages or big bedrooms, the Acoustic 260 bass stack provides the same legendary Acoustic tone as its bigger brethren in a compact, 100-watt, ultra-portable size. The 260H head puts out an impressive 100 watts of classic Acoustic tone, and the 3-band EQ lets you dial in the perfect sound for any venue. The custom design, compact 1 X 10" 260C speaker cabinet features a front-facing port for extended bass response, built in casters and a "towel bar" style handle for easy transport. The Acoustic 260's cosmetic appointments will ring true with fans of legendary Acoustic designs. Modern components and construction make this bass amp perfect for today's player. Volume and EQ controls give you complete control over the character of your tone including very natural compression and harmonically rich, musical distortion that kick in at higher volume levels..

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6/14/2012

Hartke HM1215 Kickback 15 Bass Combo 1 X 12in. AL 120 Watts Review

Hartke HM1215 Kickback 15 Bass Combo 1 X 12in. AL 120 Watts
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Plug in and play, anywhere! On stage, in the band room, at home, its a clean, clear sounding Hartke. We bought the Kickback 15 and it works well.
You have the option to have it vertical or in the kickback position, it comes with some effects as well that has your bass rocking.
Could be used for all styles of music, Jazz, Gospel, Pop, a great investment.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Hartke HM1215 Kickback 15 Bass Combo 1 X 12in. AL 120 Watts

Like all Kicks, the Kickback 15 stands up for performance and kicks back for monitoring. 120 watts into 8 ohms with a custom 15XL Hartke aluminum-cone driver for deep, deep bass, Unique Shape contour filtering and precision 3-band EQ gives you more sound shaping. All that plus a balanced XLR output (pre EQ and Volume); a headphone Out that mutes the speaker, tough cabinets with reinforced corners and metal grilles. The big Kick.Revolutionary "Two-Way" (Upright & Tilt-Back)Cabinet Design For Performance, Practice And MonitoringCustom Hartke 15" Aluminum-Cone Driver120 Watts @ 8 OhmsUnique "Shape" Control For Accurate Tone-Shaping3-Band EQPassive/Active Input JackBalanced XLR OutDimensions: 21.75"(H) X 18"(W) X 16.75"(D)Weight: 47 lb.WARRANTY 3 years parts and labor.

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6/12/2012

Behringer Ultrabass BX1800 Bass Combo 180W (Standard) Review

Behringer Ultrabass BX1800 Bass Combo 180W (Standard)
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I have had this combo for about a month now - and am very pleased. I was initially looking at the Ampeg BA115 (a friend has one), but the starting price of $320.00+ (even used) put it just a bit outside what I could reasonably afford. Having had good results from a small 10-watt guitar practice amp from Behringer, I decided on this combo.
The sound is strong and clear, with good control from the EQ - I can get anything from a low rumble to a very snappy and percussive slap. I have not had the chance to really crank the volume - the highest I've gotten was about 6 on the master and 7 on the gain, and the windows in my apartment were starting to rattle.
I have two basses that I have run through the combo - an SX Jazz Bass-style, and a mid-60s Fender MusicMaster short-scale. The SX has a very percussive sound - unless I crank the highs quite a ways down, it gets very sharp attack - great for slap'n'pop. I think that this bass sounds better with the shape control on - it seems to accentuate the "slappy" sound. The MusicMaster, on the other hand, sounds less "slappy" - and more like an older P-Bass - the amp gives it a nice thick bottom end. It can get a little muddy if the gain is too high - but I think that is more because of the short-scale bass than the amp.
I have a Logitech BP80 multi-effects unit, and have tried it both prior to the pre-amp and on the effects loop - either method has good sound.
The only improvement that I think could be made is that the CD input is a dual-RCA connector - common enough for rack-mount stereos, but seldom available in portable CD players - requiring an adapter for many owners. That should be switched to (or supplemented by) an eighth-inch stereo (headphone-style) jack so that the adapter is unnecessary.
Compared to the Ampeg that I was originally looking at, the sound is not quite as sharp and clean, but close. The volume is hard to tell, since I have not really been able to crank it, but I think it will be just a little less. While I think the Ampeg is probably the better amp by a little bit, the price difference of $70.00 makes this the better value, to me.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Behringer Ultrabass BX1800 Bass Combo 180W (Standard)

Behringer's BX1800 is a truly affordable 180W bass combo with a 15" high-impact cone speaker and a custom-made horn tweeter for high-end clarity. For tube sound it features Behringer's unique VTC Virtual Tube Circuitry. Shape your tone with the 4-band EQ and mid-shape function, while the integrated musical opto-limiter ensures ultimate volume without distortion. The connectivity options include a balanced XLR DI output, an FX Insert for external effects devices and a separate headphone output. An additional CD input lets you play along with your favorite music.

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6/09/2012

Bugera 1960 Classic 150-Watt Hi-Gain Valve Amplifier Head Review

Bugera 1960 Classic 150-Watt Hi-Gain Valve Amplifier Head
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I did a lot of research (or as much as possible) on this amp. First of all, I'm 32 and play all kinds of tones. I'm current with all kinds of music, and don't just play bbq blues. I've been looking for an affordable all tube amp for some time that didn't have all kinds of doo-dads and modelers, etc. I've owned a '78 50watt JMP, '73 Sunn Model T, 70's Fender Twin, Orange AD30, as well as some solid state amps when i was first getting into guitar.....So i'm familiar with tube tone and good vs. bad. The only thing this AMP can't do is nu-metal...but that's a good thing. you can hook up a tone sucking distortion pedal if you must, but don't waste all this warmth. For someone who plays at low volumes, this may not be the amp for you. this amp is plenty loud, and sounds better the louder it's turned up. It has a grindy overdrive and distortion as opposed to a smooth or fuzz type. I personally love this, and is what i look for. Bridging the high and low channel is the way to go, but you'll have to crank it to get it to break up...so again, if you don't like it loud, get an amp that has a master volume. The high channel will drive the pre-amp for tone, and the low will drive the power tubes to get its tone. not the most versital amp but if you like it pure, this is a great competitor in the tube amp tone world. I perfer it to many of the amps that were $1,000 more.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Bugera 1960 Classic 150-Watt Hi-Gain Valve Amplifier Head

Classic 150-Watt Hi-Gain Valve Amplifier Head

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6/05/2012

Marshall AS100D 2x8 Acoustic Combo Amp Review

Marshall AS100D 2x8 Acoustic Combo Amp
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Finally, I've found an amp that does what I want it to. Great sound, clear and LOUD. Reverb could be better, but I sometimes use separate effects. Now here was the shocker: I hooked up my electic guit and PODxt, expecting the same crappy sound I've always gotten through acoustic amps (I've tried 5 different brands/models). JIMINY CRICKET what a fantastic sound with this amp, with an electric guitar thru the POD. I'm in HOG HEAVEN. Now, I suppose purists would scoff, but I'm into DRAMA not "multiple condenser mic" purity. All I can say is, after YEARS of flopping around trying to get the right sound at a human price, this wonderful machine does it all for me. At this price, I don't see how anyone could be disappointed.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Marshall AS100D 2x8 Acoustic Combo Amp

This Marshall AS100D Acoustic Combo Amp is the one to have. Specially designed for use with a variety of acoustic instruments with or without pickups. Its four channels give you the flexibility to handle piezo transducers or magnetic pickups, a mic for vocals or instruments, and external audio equipment via a phono input channel. Channels 1 and 2 have separate EQ and level controls but also may be linked. 2x50W stereo power gives you plenty of oomph for stage performance, and a balanced line out allows direct connection to a PA. The Marshall amp has a built-in digital reverb, delay, and chorus that add dimension to your sound, and a balanced parallel effects loop with level is included. Anti-feedback controls include a phase switch and notch filters for each channel with selectable extra notch depth for channels 1 and 2.

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6/03/2012

B600 1x12" Bass Combo Amplifier Review

B600 1x12 Bass Combo Amplifier
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I'm a guitar player, first and foremost, but I do a lot of recording in my basement where I play all the instruments, so I also have a Fender jazz bass for laying down bass tracks. Recently, I started playing bass for a small band. I had a Peavy Microbass that sounded, well, OK, but it turned out not to be loud enough with live drums, piano and a couple of guitars. I didn't want a giant, heavy bass amp to give me hernia just to play in my local synagogue, and I didn't want to spend a lot of money. After some internet searching, I went and played the Hartke B600. I found it at a local merchant who was having a 15% off sale and grabbed it for $169.00.
It has tons of power and a 12" driver, plus an effects loop, line out and headphone out. It stands upright or tilts back. Great tone control circuits. All under 40 lbs. I need to play more with the tone settings but even straight out of the box and with random twiddling it sounds great. It is truly an amazing, lightweight but powerful 12" 60 watt bass amp for an unbelievably low price (even at retail).
JMT

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12 bass driver and 60 watts of power in a newly designed kickback cabinet. 3 bands of EQ and adjustable Shape circuitry. Like the other B Series combos, the B600 features a dedicated effects loop, line level out, a buffered input and a headphone output.1x12" Paper driverPower: 60 wattsEffects Send and ReturnSignal-To-Noise: 65 dBDynamic Range: 80 dBDimensions: 19" (H) x 18.5" (W) x 14.6" (D)Weight: 39.5 lb.WARRANTY 3 years parts and labor.

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5/31/2012

Line 6 Spider Valve 212 Review

Line 6 Spider Valve 212
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I've been playing guitar for about 16 years, but I'll admit I know next to nothing about amps. I know what are generally considered to be good amps (Bogner, Marshall, Mesa/Boogie, etc.), but I couldn't look at the specs on an amp and tell you if it was any good.
After a little research, I came to the conclusion that I wanted a tube combo amp, something suitable for gigging or for practicing in the bedroom, that would give me a good variety of tones. (I like to play a wide range of music, from classic rock to metal and fusion, and bands I play with usually do covers.) I went down to Guitar Center with this in mind, and one of the salespeople pointed me to the Line 6 Spider Valve 212.
I plugged in an Ernie Ball Music Man JP6 (the same guitar I have at home) and immediately fell in love with the tone. You can see the specs for this amp a little farther up on the page, so I'll just talk about what matters: this amp sounds great. Plug in a good guitar with some good pickups, and you can dial in pretty much any tone you're after. Crank it up loud, and the tube power really shines. More than a dozen amp models (two choices for each individual setting on the dial) give you a wide variety of possible sounds. You'll likely hit on one or two models that you prefer, but even within a single setting you can dial in an impressive variety of tones.
I wasn't thrilled with the clean setting, but all I had to do get the clean sound I was after was to turn down the gain on the crunch setting, add a tiny bit of tape delay and some reverb, and there it was: my perfect clean tone. I've settled on the metal modeler (amber LED) for most of my high-gain tones, but I've only had it for about a week. I'm sure I'll find all kinds of great tones on different settings.
The one complaint I have about this amp is about the effects. They are limited, as you might expect with onboard effects, but the modulation effects in particular are practically unusable. The chorus and flanger are combined on the same dial for some reason, but all I really hear when I turn it on is a flanger, which is far too overpowering besides not being tweakable. A shame, since chorus is the only modulation effect I regularly use. The phaser and tremolo are okay, but I rarely use either and haven't experimented with them. The delay, on the other hand, is very usable, and I'm glad it got its own dial with three different flavors. The tap button for setting the tempo is essential and makes the onboard delay all most guitarists will need. The reverb is decent but a little overpowering at anywhere past about 11:00 on the dial.
Some other cool things about this amp include a built-in noise gate (just hold the tap button while turning the reverb dial past noon to activate it), distortion boost (hold the tap button while turning the drive dial past noon), and a tuner (hold the tap button in until the preset indicator switches to tuner mode). You can also save all your favorite settings as presets, easily navigable with a Line 6 FBV Express or Shortboard foot switch. (I strongly recommend spending the extra $100 on an FBV Express, though $230 for a Shortboard seems a little steep.)
(A quick side not about presets: the amp comes with 400+ presets, including 9 user-programmable banks with 4 patches each, totaling 36 programmable channels. You can't overwrite any of the artist or song presets. The presets are mostly decent at best, but they're a good starting point for tweaking. The amp does include a port for a PODxt, which you can also control with your FBV foot switch, and though I've never used one I'm sure it has plenty of programmable patches, so you aren't exactly limited to the amp's channels or presets.)
All in all, this amp sounds great with a huge variety of possible tones and options that will suit the needs of most guitarists playing in cover bands or just having fun at home. No, it can't compete with a Mesa Dual Rectifier half stack, but for a tube combo amp at well under $1,000, it can't be beat. Did I mention how loud this thing gets? I haven't been able to crank it past 10:00 on the master volume yet. I can't imagine anyone would ever need to go past 1:00, even at gigs. It's a seriously loud 40 watts.

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Spider Valve fuses the versatility of amp and effects modeling with the performance and feel of a world-class tube amplifier. Combining award-winning Line 6 modeling technology with a genuine tube amplifier designed by legendary amp designer Reinhold Bogner, Spider Valve delivers unmatched performance, responsiveness and tonal flexibility on the stage and in the studio.

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Fishman Loudbox 100 Review

Fishman Loudbox 100
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About the Reviewer ...
I've played guitar, primarily electric-acoustic, for over 40 years. I toured on and off in my younger years, but currently do mostly house of worship stuff and occasional live music elsewhere.What the heck is a "combo" amp?
A "combo" amp is one that combines the amplifier circuitry or "head" with the speakers in a single cabinet. In the 25-50 lb. variety of smallish, portable combo amps, speaker configurations vary. Some have a single "driver," or "one-way" speaker. Some have two drivers (e.g., two small woofers (Trace TA-50); one large woofer and one piezo tweeter (SWR Strawberry Blonde); two coaxial drivers (Behringer ACX900, UltraSound AG50-DS4, etc.). All in the $250 to $450 price range use a single amplifier, and if there's a separate tweeter at all, it's usually a piezo type that uses passive crossover technology.What the heck do terms like piezo, passive, active and crossover mean?
In any two-way set up using a single amplifier, the tweeter is most likely a piezo type, linked to the woofer with "passive" crossover circuitry. For purposes of this review, the easiest way to describe a piezo tweeter is that it's a kind that, due to its design, can function on a very small amount of electrical energy. That's important in a two-way system using only one amplifier, because there is no separate amp to drive the tweeter ... it piggybacks the electrical current driving the woofer, and the range of frequencies it emits are separated from that current by "in-line" wiring components. The area where the audible frequency response of the two speakers intersect is called the "crossover," and because there is no separate power source for the two speakers, there is no active electronic analysis or control of the individual speakers' crossover frequencies, thus, this configuration is called a "passive" crossover.
In an "active" crossover system, separate amplifiers send power to each speaker, through a linked wiring system that actively and instantly analyzes the signal going to/from each amp, and to/from each speaker, to ensure that only the part of the input signal best suited to that speaker is delivered to the speaker. The result: better speaker efficiency, cleaner sound. Further, a powered, dome tweeter is almost ALWAYS going to sound better than the passive, piezo variety.Why is the speaker configuration important in an "acoustic" combo amp?
Most, if not all, combo "acoustic" amps use a two-way speaker system, because two-way systems generally provide a wider and more detailed frequency response than one-way speaker systems, especially in the high frequencies. Two-way systems used in nearly all combo "acoustic" amps, especially those in the $250 to $450 price range, rely on piezo tweeters and passive crossover circuitry ... because that's all the manufacturers can really afford to offer their customers in that price range. While millions of musicians use, and are very satisfied with these amps, most audio engineers agree that their sound quality is inferior to that produced by bi-amplified (separate amps for the woofer and tweeter) or tri-amplified (separate amps for the woofer, midrange and tweeter) and active crossover circuitry linking them together. Sounds great, right? But of course, there's a downside: since the most expensive part inside an amp tends to be the amplifier core itself (basically a big lump of expensive metal) more amps always means substantially higher cost.About Fishman ...
When it comes to amplification of acoustic instruments, there are few companies with more experience/knowledge than Fishman. Fishman manufactures the "Gold Line" series of under-saddle pickups for Martin, and did the same for Taylor as well, until Taylor started manufacturing its own pickup systems. Their latest "Matrix Infinity" under-saddle and "Rare Earth" soundhole pickup systems are widely praised as the best acoustic guitar pickups in the business.A "long and winding road" to the Loudbox ...
Like any other casual musician, I am always very sensitive to the cost of new gear, and am always looking for a way to save a buck, if I can possibly do so without noticeably affecting the overall quality of my sound. I looked at and tried at least a half-dozen cheap-ish combo amps in the 50-100 watt combo configuration (Fender, Trace, Roland, UltraSound, Genz-Benz, SWR, Behringer, Marshall, etc.) before ultimately buying the Loudbox. I actually purchased an UltraSound AG50-DS4 and "field-tested" it for a few months before selling it (at a loss ... sigh ... chalk it up to "test expense") and buying a Loudbox instead.
I don't mean to diss the DS4 here. In my humble opinion, the DS4 is, far and away, the best 50W acoustic amp available for $450, and it's made entirely in the USA. It uses a single amp, linked to two 8" coaxial drivers. Its ability to faithfully reproduce and amplify the natural sound of guitars and other acoustic instruments is very good. It's housed in a well-constructed and attractive cabinet, and its combination of input options, controls and effects are all top notch for its price range. However, my primary acoustic-electric is a Taylor 816, with Expression system electronics, and as hard as I tried, I just never got entirely comfortable with the way it sounded through the DS4. The upper midrange is pretty dominant in Taylor's Expression system, and I suspected the coax/piezo/passive crossover set up in the DS4 was enhancing the less desirable qualities of my unique pickup system.
That suspicion was confirmed for me when I finally gave up on the DS4 and went to the Loudbox. The Loudbox is a truly superlative combo amp, because it combines a bi-amplified, active-crossover, two-way speaker system, with plenty of power, in a small, lightweight and yet very durable cabinet. There is really nothing else like it being mass-produced anywhere on planet Earth right now, at least nothing being sold for $600. At this price, it costs quite a bit more than amps like the DS4 ($450), and a LOT more than amps like the Behringer ACX900 ($300), but what you're getting for that extra money is a LOT more in terms of power and sound quality, in a package that's smaller, lighter, tougher and more easily portable than many of the other amps mentioned above. I was so happy, in fact, with the difference in the sound quality between the two amps that I wished I had just spent the extra money and gone with the Loudbox in the first place.About the Loudbox features ...
The Loudbox uses a two-way speaker system consisting of an 8" cone woofer (90W), and a separate, 1-inch dome tweeter (10W), each powered by its own internal amplifier, with active control of the crossover frequencies between the two speakers. There's even a separate external volume control for the tweeter, so you can adjust the tweeter volume to suit your personal taste. Instead of mesh fabric, the speakers are covered by a metal grill, providing solid protection from impact and puncture damage.
The inputs and controls on the Loudbox were carefully designed "with the gigging musician in mind," and they're great. The onboard effects are pretty basic (2 "hall" reverbs, 2 "plate" reverbs and 1 chorus), but each of them is high quality, and very useable. The amp's two input channels each have their own, separate gain, 3-band EQ and effects controls. The channel 1 input is a ¼" TS; channel 2 allows you to use either a balanced XLR input, or a ¼" TS. Switchable phantom power is available for the channel 2 XLR input, if needed for your mic or other input device. The channel 2 ¼" TS input is also wired in tandem with channel 1 to allow "stereo" blending of instruments wired with two pickup sources (e.g., transducer and mini-mic), although use of the channel 2 input in this way takes up both channels in the amp, and prevents simultaneous use of the other channel.
It's a perfect amp for small venue musicians who need one input for instrument and one for voice, and can easily double as a small PA. Rear panel inputs/outputs include separate external effects sends/returns for each channel, XLR direct out, and an aux input that bypasses the mute switch on the front panel, e.g., so you can run pre-recorded music through the amp on breaks, with the channel 1 and 2 inputs muted. Additional details and complete technical specs are readily available by viewing the owner's manual on the Fishman website.
My Loudbox included Fishman's custom cordura nylon case, which I consider an essential accessory. This beefy case, with Fishman's logo nicely embroidered on the front, has strong polymer skid plates on the bottom; velcro fastener for the lid; a flap on the top which allows you to grab the amp's carrying handle with the lid down; a zippered pouch on the back for your power cable, manual and accessories, and protects the amp from dust intrusion and damage while the amp is being stored and moved around.
The "cons" of this amp, if any, are very minor. First, the polymer caps on the bottom edges have no separate rubber feet or other non-skid material at the points where they contact the floor. So if you're using the amp on a slick surface like hardwood or tile, the amp will slide around if pulled on or bumped. You'll need to add some skid-resistant material to the base, or add a skid-resistant pad to your accessory list. Second, the pinions for the rotary controls on the front panel are made of plastic (not metal) and they're not bolted to the metal faceplate ... they just protrude from the underlying circuitboard through corresponding holes in the faceplate, then covered with snugly-fitting plastic knobs. They're going to be...Read more›

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With 100 powerful watts, two channels, dedicated drivers, and weighing under 25 lbs., the Loudbox 100 is the ultimate portable acoustic instrument amplifier for the active musician.

With all the features a gigging performer demands, this two channel amplifier is lightweight, compact and ultra-flexible. Three bands of EQ with feedback-fighting controls give you incredible control over your tone.

Power: 100W RMS cumulative, bi-amped with active crossover and master volume
Drivers: 8" woofer (90W), 1" neodymium soft dome tweeter (10W)
SPL @ 1 meter: 114dB SPL
Auxiliary stereo input with level control
Digital effects: hall 1 & 2, plate 1 & 2, chorus, with master level
D.I. output: balanced XLR outputs for instrument channel, instrument/mic channel, main mix
Tuner output
Headphone output
Mute for instrument and inst/mic channels
Dimensions: 16" H x 15.5" W x 11.2" D (40.5cm x 34cm x 29cm)
Weight: 23 lbs.

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5/30/2012

Fender Hot Rod Deville 212 Review

Fender Hot Rod Deville 212
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Ok lets agree together that fender has the most awesome clean sound on planet earth that all guitar amp manufacturers wish they have. And this Fender Deville 2x12 has it! however,the overdrive/distortion is really unuseable unless all you play for the rest of your life is twang rock and blues!
There are tons of musicians like me who play more than two styles of music, and on a weekly basis that really play gigs on the weekends and rehearse during the week. My complaint with this fender amp model is that,WHY PAY SO MUCH MONEY FOR THIS AMP AND USE ONLY ONE CHANNEL ,WHICH IS THE CLEAN CHANNEL. then ending up spending more money on 3 or 4 more solid state pedals to put infront of the clean channel and claim to have a great tube sound! uuh duh!
to prove my point, just google this amp concerning the modification on the overdrive/distortion channel and there's tons and tons on the web costing you and extra $400 more not including the shipping. If this was a one channel amp and the price is $400 street deal, then you will see 5 stars from me,cause its not made in the U.S.A.
there are other amps out there for $100 less "use" and some new! and both channels are useable and gig worthy out of the box without pedals. any used mesa boogie would do,peavey classic series,bogners,marshal DSL/TSL,egnaters,vOX ac30 etc... if buying a name brand is your thang cause you wanna be associated with the "club" your pathetic! The Fender frontman 65R has a much better overdrive/distortion at gig level and its not even a tube amp! aaaaaahhh!
TONE IS NOT A NAME BRAND IT BEGINS WITH YOU.....
FENDER CORPORATE! SHAME ON YOU!!! IF LEO FENDER WAS ALIVE TODAY MANY OF YOU WILL BE FIRED....
TO PROVE MY POINT FENDER HOT ROD DEVILLE 2X12 III IS JUST OUT AND IT HAD TO DO WITH THE DISTORTION CHANNEL! I GUESS FENDER POLICE WAS READING MY COMMENTS!

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Everything you need, and nothing you don't! The Hot Rod DeVille 212 sends 60 scorching watts straight into a pair of 12 in. Fender Special Design Eminence speakers, courtesy of two 6L6 Groove Tube output tubes and three 12AX7 preamp tubes. Three channels give you a choice of 'normal' (with bright switch), 'drive' (with gain and master controls) and 'more drive' sounds, with additional features including an FX loop, Fender long-spring reverb, external speaker jack, internal variable bias control and 2-button, 3-function channel select footswitch. The look is pure Fender, featuring a chrome panel with vintage pointer knobs, plus black textured vinyl covering and silver grille cloth. Features:Independent Gain and Master Controls in Drive ChannelBright SwitchEffects LoopReverbExternal Speaker Jack2-Button 3-Function Footswitch for Channel Select, Drive Select and "More Drive" SelectChrome PanelVintage Pointer KnobsInternal Variable Bias ControlTechnical Info:Model Name: Hot Rod DeVille 212Type: All tube preamp and power ampOutput: 60 watts into 2 or 4 ohms (Switchable)Ohms: 2 or 4 ohmsSpeakers: 2-12 in. Fender Special Design SpeakersChannels: 3 Selectable Channels (Normal, Drive and More Drive)Controls: Presence, Reverb, Master, Middle, Bass, Treble, Drive Select Switch, Drive, Volume, Bright Switch, Standby SwitchCovering: Black Textured Vinyl with Silver Grille ClothWeight: 53.5 lbs. (24.26 kg)Dimensions:Height: 21 in. (53.34 cm)Width: 24.25 in. (61.59 cm)Depth: 10.75 in. (27.30 cm)Tube Complement: 3 X 12AX7, 2 X 6L6, Solid State RectifierAccessories: Comes with 2-Button 3-Function Footswitch for Channel Select, Drive Select and "More Drive" SelectFootswitch: Uses 2-Button 3-function footswitch p/n 0050419000, Accy.Introduced: 1997

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5/19/2012

Line 6 Vetta II Combo Amp Review

Line 6 Vetta II Combo Amp
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This amp has servered me well, I still use it extensively for live performances as well as recording. I bought it back in 2004 and it's still going strong.
The paragraph below is basically the same review I posted on Musicians Friend back in 2006.
This amp has all the features I've ever wanted and a lot more. If you're a mad scientist type that likes experimenting, then you will love this amp. If you're someone that doesn't like messing around with a lot of knobs and settings, then this is not the amp for you, buy a Fender twin or a Marshall half and be done with it. While the Vetta II alone offers a lot of capabilities I do recommend the FBV floorboard and Variax guitar if your budget permits. The value of being able change your amp and guitar models with a single click of a footswitch is worth the price of admission IMHO. Before I had the Vetta II and Variax I can't tell you how many times I wished for this capability while switching guitars between songs at a gig. The only issue I've had with this amp is it's susceptibility to power surges. It used to reset itself on me during rehearsals but since then, I've always plugged it into a surge protector and it's never reset on me during a gig.

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Vetta II is the latest evolution of Line 6's flagship Vetta amplifier family.Inside Vetta II lives a virtual collection of 80 sought-after vintage and modern amps and cabs, over 50 stompbox and studio rack effects, and 4 classic mic/cabinet setups.At the touch of a single button, Vetta II can deliver two independent amp and effects paths at once, giving you the creative freedom to build incredibly detailed tones.At home, on stage, or in the studio, Vetta II features XLR balanced direct outs, AES/EBU and S/PDIF 24-bit/96KHz digital inputs and outputs, and A.I.R. II mic/speaker simulation.Vetta II is loaded with a pair of custom 12" Celestion speakers driven by a 150-watt stereo power section, and includes a direct digital Variax Modeling Guitar input that seamlessly integrates Variax's collection of guitars with Vetta II's collection of amps, cabs, and effects. Add an FBV pedal board, and this entire setup can be transformed into virtually any rig with just the press of a footswitch. And now there's even more!Download the FREE Vetta II V2.5 Update and get an all-new collection of Wah models, expression pedal controlled Pitch Bending, 6 new Amp Models, a dedicated Solo Boost function, Tuner enhancements, Tap Tempo that syncs to MIDI clock, plus much more.

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5/12/2012

Warmenfat Micro Amplifier Review

Warmenfat Micro Amplifier
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I run Weston House Recording, a tiny recording studio out of my small home in Orangevale, CA; just on the edge of Sacramento.
On occasion, I have gear go down and usually travel to the San Francisco Bay Area for repair. Within the past year, I ran into the Rainbow Electronics repair shop, not more than 10 miles from me. Funny thing is that it they've been there for 20 years!
John McCormack owns and runs Rainbow Electronics along with his wife. From the moment we met, we became instant friends; with me being intrigued with all that he does and he with all that I do.
Out of one of our numerous conversations, he introduced me to his Warmenfat project. Of course, me being one who is always looking for high-quality gear at reasonable prices from not-so-known very small gear manufacturers, there was no choice but for me to buy one so that I could try it out over a long period of time in my studio.
I've been using the Warmenfat for almost a year now. It seems I pull it out whenever nothing else seems to work. In particular, it's great when electric guitar players come into the studio and want to go directly out of their analog or digital pedals or when they want to use their little practice amps with all their digital modeling. These "budget" pieces usually have good tone but for whatever reason, they rarely seem big and 3-dimensional.
I've found that if I run the Warmenfat inline some place in the signal-chain, I can dial-in just the right type and amount of tube character I need and get some life out of these units. I'd imagine it's from all the good and not-so-good natural characteristics in the high-quality tubes and transformer in the Warmenfat; not to mention the excellent circuit designing and product manufacturing.
There are endless possibilities with the Warmenfat. I haven't had the opportunity yet, as there's not really ever any money in paying artists budgets for experimentation, but I look forward in my own projects to try patching in the Warmenfat in various places, such as big electric guitar amp's effects loops, bass tracks, vocal tracks, FX buses, and so many other things!
Weston Ray

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The Warmenfat Micro Amp is a versatile compact class A pure tube amplifier. Designed for lead guitar, bass guitar, keyboards, microphone pre amp, or as an effects processor. It can also be used anywhere to add tube tone. The 2 watt single ended tube output stage can easily drive a lead guitar cabinet to a wonderfully over driven tube crunch tone at practice volume level! Used in an effects loop, it can add tube warmth to solid state modeling amps. Old school tube amplifiers can benefit from its ability to add massive overdrive, British style tone crunch without "hot rodding" or modifying the vintage old amp. Used as tube microphone preamplifier, the Warmenfat Micro Amp offers world class performance. The aerospace derived low noise Ohmite metal film resistors and the Wima polypropylene capacitors allow the Warmenfat to reproduce with a clarity and natural warmth that out performs microphone pre amps costing thousands of dollars. Using multiple Warmenfats cascaded can result in awesome crunch or even be used with spring reverb unit for the ultimate pure tube stereo chorus sound.The Warmenfat Micro Amps versatility limits it usefulness only to the imagination of its owner.

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Epiphone Blues Custom Combo Amplifier, 15/30W, Tube 2x12" Speaker Review

Epiphone Blues Custom Combo Amplifier, 15/30W, Tube 2x12 Speaker
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I have owned and gigged with this amp for nearly 2 years. I play thru it exclusively, if I am even using an amp. I have a custom made guitar, so I can't help anyone achieve a well known tone. Sorry. But I can say that it is fairly easy to find your very own sound with this amp. It has alot of tone shaping choices in the form of the eq, and a switch that also acts as a frequency boost in a way. It is a switch that can make the 3 different bands of the eq act independently of each other, or not. For example, on windows media player, you can set the eq sliders where if u move one of them, the other frequencies are going to pull up a little all around that slider. Same highly generalized theory. Kinda. This amplifier has a great tube tone, and you can get a "pop" to some bass notes. Kinda funky. It is solid. Absolutely. And will get very loud. I've never gigged anywhere where I could even think of turning this up past halfway, on the 15w class A setting.
It is a trebly amp. And I play a trebly maple guitar. But I just turn the highs down a good bit on the amp, and roll a little tone off my pickups, i have an even sounding tone. The overdrive channel is fairly good, but it has always been way too trebly, even while playing a Black Beauty in the rythm position. Soooo, I would suggest either changing all the tubes, (they had to cut cost somewhere), or use your own overdrive. If u turn this amp up on the clean channel, it will have a very nice, very silky smooth breakup. It is a classic rock sound that is so much fun to play with. Or you can get really good blues tones out of it. The entire amp is tube powered, down to a tube rectifier and tube reverb.
This amp is better than most other amps I've ever tried. It is durable, reliable, looks and sounds great. If you are on a budget and want to get more than you pay for, at least try this amp. you won't be sorry. If you just take your time with it, you can find a lot of the tones you are looking for. I use a processor in front of it most of the time now, due to the style of playing i have, i need tons of effects. I run that signal into a tube preamp, then into the amp. It sounds wonderful, not at all digital sounding, and is really responsive to nuance. a worthwhile buy for sure.
Pros: sensitive response to playing, great tube sound, built like a tank, enough options for extra cab outputs, and really sweet breakup on the clean channel when turned up allowing for some serious tone.
Cons: no effects loop, trebly (but can be easily remedied by the amps own electronics), heavy as lead to tote (get casters), and cheap stock tubes.
All in all, i don't ever want to be without this amp. I'm sure there are better, but with all the options I have for finding the right sound for a song, i am not even interested in finding one. It does all I need, and what it does not do, I use 3rd party gear to accomplish.

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30W or 15W Class AB Combo, Tube Rectifier (5AR4), 2 Channels, DC Powered Filaments, 2 x 12" Eminence Speakers and Tube Reverb

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4/21/2012

Fender Pro Jr Amp Review

Fender Pro Jr Amp
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This is a great amp. Light and portable but loud as hell. I used this guy at a band practice with drums and another guitarist recently and only had the volume at about 3 and it was plenty loud enough. Sounds great too. Its definitely got that tube sound. I also love the simplicity of the controls: just on/off, volume, and tone.

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The Pro Junior™ is a simple, uncluttered 15-Watt tone machine, a great grab & go tube amp for stage or studio. It's got the fat mid tones characteristic of EL-84 output tubes, a dual 12AX7 tube preamp, and a 10-inch Fender Special Design speaker with vintage cone. These ingredients add up to incredibly touch-sensitive dynamic response that experienced players prefer.Other features include a unique clean-to-drive volume control, and external speaker capability. The new Pro Junior IIalso includes these upgrades: Easier reading black control panel with front reading text; New badge; Vintage Fender "dog bone" handle; Vintage sized jewel light; Lower-noise shielding; Rattle reducing shock absorbers for EL-84 tubes; Heavy duty set screw "chicken head" knobs. Fender Hot Rod Series Pro Junior 15W 1x10 Tube Guitar Combo Amp Features: All tube preamp and 15-watt power section Volume and tone controls 1 - 10" special design Eminence® speaker Extension speaker jack

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4/16/2012

Fender Blues Deluxe Reissue 40W 1x12" Combo Amp Review

Fender Blues Deluxe Reissue 40W 1x12 Combo Amp
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I purchased the Fender Blues Deluxe Reissue after comparing many of the other Fender amps. Prior to this, I used small practice amps at home. For rehearsals and performances I was always fortunate to have access to other more powerful amps. After much research, it seemed that the Fender Blues Deluxe would suit my needs and budget. I used it at a gig 5 days after receiving it. It superceeded my expectations. It provided more high quality sound than I thought it would be capable of. I highly recommend this product.

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The Fender Blues Deluxe Reissue 40W 1x12" Combo Amp rocks—and not just for the blues! In 1993 Fender released the Blues series amps to great success and acclaim. These modern versions of vintage Fender amps from the '50s customized those designs with channel switching and reverb while retaining the vintage style and tone. When the series was updated, the extremely popular Hot Rod series was born and became a new standard in tube amplification. Now Fender has brought back the Blues designs to satisfy the increasing number of enthusiasts who continue to request the warm tone, unique circuitry, and vintage-style features and look of the original versions.The Blues Deluxe Reissue, a reinterpretation of the classic Deluxe amp with a tube complement of 3 - 12AX7s and 2 - 6L6s produces 40W into a 12" Eminence special-design speaker with an all-tube preamp and power amp. It has Normal and Drive channels with independent Gain and Master for the Drive channel and a Bright switch for Normal channel. It also has an effects loop, reverb, presence, master volume, 3-band EQ, and Standby switch. Original Blues series styling includes a chrome control panel, vintage chicken head knobs, and, of course, genuine tweed covering. Fender Blues Deluxe Reissue 40W 1x12" Combo Amp Features: All-tube preamp and power amp 40W 12" special-design Eminence speaker Dual selectable channels (Normal and Drive) Independent Gain and Master controls in the Drive channel Bright switch for Normal channel Effects loop Reverb Chrome panel Vintage chicken-head knobs Controls: Presence, Reverb, Master, Middle, Bass, Treble, Drive select switch, Drive, Volume, Bright, Standby Genuine tweed covering Tube complement: 3 x 12AX7, 2 x 6L6, SS rectifier Includes footswitch 23-1/2"W x 18-3/4"H x 10-1/2"D 45 lbs.

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4/13/2012

Traynor Custom Valve 50BLUE YCV50BLUE 50W All Tube 1x12 Combo Amp with Celestion Speaker Review

Traynor Custom Valve 50BLUE YCV50BLUE 50W All Tube 1x12 Combo Amp with Celestion Speaker
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This is a nice all-tube amp with a clean channel and a gain channel. You cannot play both channels simultaneously. The whole thing is well-made and solid. The cabinet has a plywood construction, all knobs and switches are firm. The spring reverb sounds good. There is a footswitch for switching between channels. At 50W it is obviously pretty loud. Thanks to a master volume control you have good control over how loud the amp sounds. It's reasonably heavy at around 50 pounds. It's a bit darker in tone and modeled more after a Marshall than a Fender, but the brightness button gives you the option of lightening things up, plus you can dial down the mid-ranges thanks to the three tone controls - bass, middle, treble. It is obviously retro in its styling and is a nice little boutique-y kind of amp.
The gain channel sounds pretty good - but this amp is not for heavy metal, at least not without a distortion pedal. The gain channel has a 'boost' switch that increases distortion and volume - I don't use the gain channel without the boost. Without the boost, the distortion is very mild and not particularly useable to my ears. I like the fact that the distortion is 'real,' coming from over-driving the tubes, rather than being simulated through a pedal. I have never had any reliability issues.

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The Traynor YCV50Blue 50 Watt 1x12" Combo Amp uses 3 premium Sovtek 12AX7A dual-triode tubes up front to dish out delicious and creamy distortion while a pair of Sovtek EL34s handle the heavy work. Sophisticated Traynor design provides great flexibility and makes it easy to get world-class clean, crunchy, and overdriven tones. The Vintage 30 cranks out boutique tone even at very low volume levels, thanks to the amp's master volume. The lead channel features a dark "British" sound. Auto-matching circuitry maintains bias balance as tubes age, ensuring hum-free performance. This combined with DC filaments on the preamp tubes makes this Traynor combo amp one of the quietest tube amps ever, even with high gain. Traynor gives you a 2-year (even if you break it!) transferable warranty.

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