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True Analog Modeling 15-Watt Guitar Amp with 8" Speaker
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Technical Details
- Original 20-Watt vintage-design guitar speaker- Wide-range drive control for super-fat sounds with any pickup types
- Dedicated 3-band EQ and master level control
- CD input allows you to play along with your favorite music
- Powerful headphone output with speaker simulation
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By Randall Laclaire (New York State)
As far as construction goes, this appeared to have been built solidly. The design itself looked quite nice and the features were easy to use. Unfortunately, even as a practice amp goes, this one is poor at best. I've been playing guitars for nearly 30 years. I've had everything from 5 watt battery powered amps to stage amps. I received this package today, 1/25/10. I removed it from the box, set up, and did what any good musician does: I tried it with no effects, no pre-amps, and nothing inline. Just a clean guitar to amp connection. At volume settings below 5 it played nice and clean. Once you hit 5 or higher, it breaks up (more as you increase the volume). It begins as a light fuzz at five, and turns to a crackle by 10. It's rated at 15 watts power and has an 8" 30w minimum rated speaker with a max rating of 125 watts. While this makes it durable, it also limits sound. I'm guessing that the speaker is actually too much for the amp circuit to drive, but I could be wrong. Sadly, my son's 10 watt fender squier practice amp overpowered this amp. With the Behringer set to 10 on the main volume and 10 on the drive, the little tiny Squier 10 watt amp overpowered it while the Squier was set to 3, without the drive on.
To make matters worse, I could actually talk more loudly than the amp. Granted, this is only a practice amp and it really should not be able to rattle the windows, and that is fine. But it should be able to at least keep up with a 10 watt amp. My son likes to play with me, and I was hoping that this would make a nice match for his practice amp so I wouldn't have to ramp down all my equipment to keep him in hearing range. Unfortunately (again) this amp wasn't even able to do that.
I then tested this with my most basic pedals, and then eventually with my RP350 multi-effects pedal. ANY type of effect I tried simply caused the speaker to give up the ghost. The speaker is so unresponsive that distortion caused it to lose sounds left right and center. If I tried to play a simple blues solo, I'd lose about every other note due to the speaker not being able to keep up with the sounds being produced.
For this reason, I'd never recommend this amp to anyone but a child with a cheap guitar who can't play more than "Mary Had a Little Lamb." (And I don't mean SRV's version)
I didn't even bother to try it with my mic for vocals because there was simply no point.
If the company that produces it can get it to at least equal the power of most other 15 watt practice amps, they'll have a nice piece of equipment on their hands. The cabinet was solid, the controls worked smoothly, nothing was loose or rattling. It's actually very attractive looking. It has a "modern" feel to it with a more classic look.
By T. Fritts
At only $60 I was a little apprehensive about this amp, but decided to give it a try. A local music store owner offered that if I weren't satisfied, he'd take the value of it out of the cost of an amp I've had my eye on in his shop.
It will not be needed! This amp is a little shocker! My Strat Clone sounds downright sexy through this thing. And, small small changes in the settings make a difference with this one! With a similarly priced amp in the shop, it had to have big changes in settings to make small differences. With the Behr, the change of going from 2 to halfway between 2 and 3 gives a little change. Sensitivity is not an issue at all.
It also feels quite durable. I wouldn't throw it off a building, but it should tolerate being chucked in the back seat of the car for a jam at a friends house. And, if loud is your thing, then it should suit you nicely. I've already gotten it loud enough to get a grouchy phone call from my neighbor. ;) On the mellow settings it gives good, and when the switches are set to the Calif/Hot setting, it still works great!
For $60 at this level of quality, it's one of the best deals I've gotten off Amazon!
By Terrell G. Lewis (Augusta, GA)
Granted I went from a 10 year old squire amp to this behringer amp, but the sound quality is much better. This is a very basic practice amp, but I like the sound options that is has. I would recommend this for people practicing at their home, but definitely not if you plan to play out anywhere.
By J. Vuocolo (Philadelphia, PA)
Right now i absolutely hate this amp, like i want to just through it out the window of my house. But that is because i am actually some what good at guitar now. When i bought it i had no idea how to play, or even how distortion worked. So when i got it i thought it was really cool with how it had presets for different sounds, but right now i want an amp that i can fool around with a bit more. So my suggestion is get it but get rid of it in a year, cuz thats how long it took for my to blow out. But it is great for just starting.
By Shreddin' Mike (San Francisco, CA United States)
Like others here it's been years since I've really played my old electric guitar. Plugged it in to my old Ampeg amp and found it was dead after years of abuse then neglect. The other reviews on this really do reflect fact, so this review can't really add much - this is a great-sounding little practice amp! Better than my Ampeg ever was! It does have a bit of a hum but then the noise of my strat overwhelms that - need humbuckers I guess. The different distortion effects combined with the gain and three tone controls are also fun to play with. As an added bonus it gets loud enough to annoy nearby neighbors! Heh heh...
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