In my opinion, there is not need the manual. For me the important part is the level adjustment presence where there how aggressive you choose. It plays on the presence of mediums, opting to treble or bass. This is really a setting that gives the amplitude to the sound of the amp. So that I found very quickly my right settings and I sincerely believe that all of these settings allow you to offer a wide range of sounds depending on whether you want to play the blues or address registers more aggressive.
I do not address here the problem of versatility as the dexterity of some guitarists can play all styles of music with any amp.
But it is true, a Marshall is done to address the rocks and logs everything that is so rich in general sustain and gain. It should not be here to have a complex amp transistor hybrid here compared to a tube amp.
Sometimes, a good transistor amp surpass a mediocre amp lamps. It must be recognized that Marshall has amazed me by its dynamism and sound. A clean sound probably average, but perfectly acceptable with a Strat.
Regarding the saturated part. I love it. And nothing prevents to put a little chorus or delay in the loop to refine the sound. And as mentioned above, the settings are complete and there is something easily find the right settings. Finally, this amp accepts carefree good distortion pedal on the clean channel. Marshall grain is still present if we take care to put it a foot remaining neutral. I try, in the description of this amp to be as objective as possible, having compared to other Marshall tube and next to which he did not blush, far from it.
You can you afford beautiful little scenes the sound is generally the rest when an SM 57 before we met. I love this amp for its convenience, simplicity and generosity in the rendering of sound. Where it should be goal is to always take into consideration the combination of amp and guitar.
Critics of an amp are testing it with several guitars. What I actually did. What makes me say that even though this amp is not a Fender Strat with a, we get very good cleans. In contrast, good saturated saturations are not obtained with microphones low level of output. Also, it is repeated, it is often referred to knobs that sizzle in Marshall etc, etc Like any instrument which is aging more, a minimum of care and regular maintenance is required.
I can assure you that after all these years, no knob has been replaced or sizzling. When the amp was not heckled wildly or stored in a damp place. This is an amp that can easily make you go back to the 90s with sounds both vintage but with a nice touch of dynamism.
I love Marshall, all models. There has not been, for me, good or bad. They were all different, with different qualities and orientations. It depends on what you want to do with his amp. For my part, this Marshall Valvestate also allowed me to not have to turn a tube amp for a few minutes or a few times in small places. And then you can play with and make virtually saturate muted this is significant, have the dynamism without becoming deaf.
I remake that choice without hesitation, and that reassures me is that we are still in very good working condition, at ridiculous prices. I sell my electric guitar amp.
This is a Marshall Valvestate model, power 80 W. Built in England, ideal for versatile use exploration Directory rock-blues-jazz. The amp is transistor with a tube preamp on channel distortion. It has an effects loop on the front and its dedicated volume control. If you want to add a chorus or delay, this is also where it connects! I used it recently and it produces the same sound as when I bought it! I separated as electronics has changed and I will buy an amp later. I sell at a price of euros.
Given the number of …. Given the number of available knobs on the front of the amp, one quickly finds happiness with a minimum of determination and ears! Its not clear its rivals may not work with some amps Fender blues, but it is still quite warm and powerful.
As for its saturated, it can play rock and roll with a slight distortion to the death metal fatter. What I like most about this amp is its versatility that has allowed me to explore different styles before settling on things more accurate.
Excellent value for money, I do not regret this choice, which at the time was the best possible. Transistor amplifier with preamp tube distortion on the channel. Finally, what it sounds! I bought it secondhand, in my sports teacher Something for the young budding metalheads. However bad reviews reveal that the amp does not fit all! I hesitate to buy a small chorus for a little more "flat" on the clean channel with reverb but it was already what it takes! Sounds very fat but still sharp on the OD2 channel, just what I need, what I like!
Solid state, 80 watts of power too much for a 1x12, imho. I might have mod'ed mine with one if I remember correctly. I don't think it had a Cabinet out jack, which ticked me off at the time.
You would be hard pressed to find a Marshall that sounds like dog droppings. The tube…. The tube in the preamp stage made the dirty channel OK, but it was still lacking something. Maybe because they used an ECC83? The cleans were merely OK, and not even close to my Fender tube amps. As a backup. Wouldn't want it as my 'main rig' though. It was kind of unreliable too, but that's probably because mine was used so much, and for a great number of years before I owned it.
After replacing some POTs, and getting it serviced though, it was a good backup amp. I mean it had two channels, one is clean and the other is the overdrive channel. They are handy if you like playing the blues, or getting a simmaler sound Apart from that there isnt a lot more on the amp.
Its quite loud and its got a marshall name on it. Good contour knob on the Boost channel goes from blues type thing to trasher distortion in one turn! I'd like a more Low-end response from the speaker its a bit trebly! Good combo! My marshall is like new without a scratch on it. I would recomend this guitar amp to a begginer and a proffesional alike. If you are looking for a guitar amp tht can satisfy youre needs then this is it!!!!!!
I'd say it comes down to what you want it for. For home use and practice I don't think you'd go far wrong. If your interested in great clean tones then it might not be ideal. Bluemoon78 , Feb 16, I always considered it be a mid-end Marshall amp. Most people will say its a good to decent amp. Peeps who play tube amps exclusivley, or from a vintage, purist, classic rock influence will always bash it though. It will produce huge distortion at low volumes easily; its relatively easy to dial in, and I found the cleans were decent.
The fact of the matter is, they are much cheaper in price, and easier to maintain than tube amps. As a practice amp, and small gigging amp, it's fine. That being said, I am thinking about getting it as it is something that I can grow into. I have a MG15 right now the new MG series, not the lousy older version and wasn't really considering getting anything else for the time being but when I saw this unit for sale for a decent price I figured I might as well pick it up.
Joined: Jun 29, Messages: 3 Likes Received: 1. I have an myself , and I like it. I saved it from a fate worst than death for all instruments and amps ; the Pawn shop. It can be a bit tricky , volume wise at times , but I've used it live and in the studio. It does what I need it to do. It was missing the foot switch , and I guess it uses the PED If someone out there knows which foot switch I need , tell me.
But , all and all it will be a good starter amp for you. You can't go to far wrong with a Marshall! Dmony , Jun 29, I bought a used PED pedal for my , looks like it will fit my needs.
If anyone has any recommendations, please feel free to let me know. Peace and good playing.
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