Guitar Review Ninja
Sign up for my newsletter and I'll send you
the Fender, Jackson & Ibanez 2009 catalogs
for FREE!!! They're awesome.

Hit Ctrl+D to bookmark this page.

Guitar Review Ninja

…before you buy your guitar (related stuff)

Marshall

Marshall MG10KK Limited Edition Kerry King Guitar Combo Amplifier vs. Fender Blues DeVille Reissue Guitar Combo Amplifier (60 Watts, 4×10 in.)

Marshall MG10KK Limited Edition Kerry King Guitar Combo Amplifier

Marshall MG10KK Limited Edition Kerry King Guitar Combo Amplifier

The Marshall MG10KK Kerry King Guitar Combo Amp packs a huge punch into a small package. The MG10KK is very easy to use but allows for a variety of tone adjustments including clean, tone contour, and of course an overdrive that will melt your face. A CD input is also included so you can jam along with a favorite Slayer song or anything else you would like. The MG10KK also features a emulated line out for recording as well as a emulated headphone output for silent practice.

Marshall MG10KK Limited Edition Kerry King Guitar Combo Amplifier Features…

Output (RMS): 10 Watt

Channels: 2

CD Input: Yes

Emulated Line Out: Yes

Emulated Headphone Out: Yes

FDD (Frequency Dependent Damping): Yes

Speaker: 1 x 6.5 inch

Dimensions: 11.6 x 12.2 x 7.4 inches

Weight: 11 lbs.

Buy Marshall MG10KK Limited Edition Kerry King Guitar Combo Amplifier
Buy at Zzounds.comBuy at Musiciansfriend.com


im using a ammerican 60s telli and a yammaha wiv buckers and it sounds grate with both. when playing metal ther aint no need for a moddler cos the drive and gain is as brutal as a barbarian on speed.

and it has been made so it has that warmer tone of a valve amp though it is not one. iv played a diggiteck efects system truit and it sounds ace. this is the beast practace amp ever!!!!!!!! but it is only a praktase amp

the 10 wat kerry king amp is an ace rock or metal practace amp with over drive to blow your mind. it allso has the warm tone of a valv amp if you play it cleen or with a moderate amout of gain. not for the folk or pop scene though

good

i love this amp it rocks so hard for something so small go out and bye one even if you have some amasing stack setup just bye it it will make you smile and with that gain it will make yr ers bleed ceep to

Metg (08/31/2008)
"Marshall Kerry King 10 watt amp"

Red white with some black tribal.

Just 20 bucks more for a limited kerry king.

It is a Marshall.

Havn't needed it.

a customer from charter.net (1/2/2009)

Fender Blues DeVille Reissue Guitar Combo Amplifier (60 Watts, 4×10 in.)

Fender Blues DeVille Reissue Guitar Combo Amplifier (60 Watts, 4x10 in.)

 Amp Schematic

Please Login or Register

 User Manual

Please Login or Register

In 1993, Fender released the ‘Tweed’ series amps to great success and acclaim. The concept: what if a great old collectable 1950s Deluxe or Bassman was customized with channel switching and Reverb The Blues Deluxe and Blues DeVille were launched as vintage-styled tube amps with ’boutique’ tone at mass-produced prices, and many pro players in the rock, country, and blues fields used them with great results. After a few years, the Blues Deluxe and Blues DeVille were reborn as the Hot Rod Deluxe and Hot Rod DeVille, when they received modified circuitry, a third -More Drive channel, and Black/Silver cosmetic treatment. Though the Hot Rod series amps are more popular than ever today, increasing numbers of enthusiasts continue to request the warm tone, unique circuitry, features and look of the original versions. These ‘Reissue’ models will be offered in addition to the Hot Rods. The Blues DeVille Reissue produces 60 watts into four 10″ blue Alnico-Magnet speakers by Eminence.

Fender Blues DeVille Reissue Guitar Combo Amplifier (60 Watts, 4×10 in.) Features…

* 3 12AX7 preamp tubes and 2 6L6 output tubes.

* Normal and Drive channels, voiced for classic blues, country and rock styles

* Bright switch for Normal channel

* Fender spring Reverb

* Effects Loop

* Cloth Tweed covering, Chicken Head pointer knobs and chrome control panel

* Two-button footswitch (Channel/Drive-More Drive) is included

Buy Fender Blues DeVille Reissue Guitar Combo Amplifier (60 Watts, 4×10 in.)
Buy at Zzounds.comBuy at Musiciansfriend.com

 Amp Schematic

Please Login or Register

 User Manual

Please Login or Register


I bought into the tube hype. Hey, it had a tweed cover and all that crap, had glowing tubes when I turned it on. 60 watts. I knew that the distortion sucked, but I was using a stomp box. I play ethereal shoe gaze/new wave type stuff. Wanted a fat clean sound. I ended up with a HEADACHE. I don't know if it's the amp or the 4-10 speakers, but at stage volume had the effect of a frying pan upside the head. Way too percusive. And I don't play that loud. Peavy classic 50 looks the same and is a little better and cheaper, but gives a headache eventually, too. Good if you like to abuse the ears of both your audience and yourself. Also, you can not use it as a practice amp. Volume control goes from off to stage volume in a micrometer. Bad design.

I bought this amp used in 95 and sold it in 97. Tweed model. Gave me what I expected. Speaker cabinet and fx loop jacks in a very bad spot.

Only good for blues. Not versatile. I hear some of these post grunge bands using these amps (or peaveys, they look the same.) and I start getting that same headache. And it's not just cause the band sucks. Does warmth=headache? Maybe.

Anonymous (11/17/2000)

When I first got the amp, I felt like it sounded rather nice for an amp in its price range. In a live setup it rings very nice and has beautiful tone. I found it was rather difficult to record this amp though. It was difficult to get a shimmering glassy sounded recorded from it. I was using an SM57 mic in various positions and playing with the settings and it is difficult to get it to glow like its more expensive sibblings in the studio.

Another issue I had with the amp, was despite a rather nice full sound, it was difficult to control the highs and they often became too harsh for my liking. The sound on clean would begin to break up rather early at low volumes. Not enough headroom. It was something I lived with for quite a few gigs and my work around was to simply tone down on the highs, keep the bright switch off and keep the presence at 0. It was effective and I still got compliments for my sound, but I felt that I wasn't using the amp the best of its abilities. Later, I bought a Groove Tubes 12AT7 preamp tube and replaced the stock 12AX7 in the v1 position. This increased the headroom and lowered the gain output to the other tubes which ended up being the perfect solution to my harsh high problem. The other advantage was that my amp became more flexible. I felt that I could properly use some of the features like presence, which helps brighten up the sound yet it remains smooth. Changing the tube caused me to loose some gain in the drive channel, but that was a sacrifice I was willing to make.

Since making that minor mod (which cost me no more than $20), the sound of that amp has also improved in the studio. Not perfect, but much easier to work with and the sound is now more than acceptable. So for those of you who are concerned about the harsh "ice pick" highs, try replacing the 12AX7 in the v1 with a lower gain tube such as the 12AT7, makes a world of difference.

This is my second time writing a review for this product, but it is based on more experience using it and will include a little tip for helping it sound better.

The features meet my needs on stage quite well. That is amp needs. It has two channels, a clean and a drive channel, reverb, tone controls: bass, middle, high, presence control, a bright switch that adds more treble (which i rarely use), a footswitch which allows you to switch between clean and drive channels and also to turn on and off reverb.

The amp is 60 watts and is very loud. Has more power than I actually use.

I've been gigging and rehearsing with it for 2 years and it hasn't failed me yet.

Overall, I think this is a great amp for the low price you pay. The good thing about it is that you can experiment with different tubes to help it to sound more the way you want and it is a great live amp with a whole lot of power.

Joseph Hackl (04/16/2008)

Leave a Comment

Marshall JVM410H 4-Channel Guitar Amplifier Head (100 Watts) vs. Bugera 333 Guitar Amplifier Head (120 Watts)

Marshall JVM410H 4-Channel Guitar Amplifier Head (100 Watts)

Marshall JVM410H 4-Channel Guitar Amplifier Head (100 Watts)

The JVM Series 100-watt, valve-driven power stage is built on the classic design responsible for the legendary Marshall roar found in the JCM800, 2203 and “plexi” Super Lead amplifiers — a timeless foundation for countless classic rock and metal guitar tones for over 4 decades. Featuring a quartet of EL34 valves, this peerless design has been expertly crafted to compliment the extraorinary wealth of tones found in the JVM.

Marshall JVM410H 4-Channel Guitar Amplifier Head (100 Watts) Features…

Type: Head

Output (RMS): 100 watts

Channels: 4

Modes per Channel: 3

Independent Gain and Volume (per Ch): Yes

Independent Tone Network (per Ch): Yes

Independent Reverb Level (per Ch): Yes

Dual Programming Master Volumes: Yes

Silent Recording: Yes

Emulated Line Out XLR: Yes

Series FX Loop: Yes

Programmable Parallel/Series FX Loop: Yes

MIDI Presets: 128

Pre-Amp Valves: 4XECC83

Power Amp Valves: 1X ECC83, 4XEL34

6-way Programmable Footcontroller (Supplied) PEDL-00044

Dimensions (mm): 750 x 310 x 215

Weight (KG): 22

Speakers: No

Buy Marshall JVM410H 4-Channel Guitar Amplifier Head (100 Watts)
Buy at Zzounds.comBuy at Musiciansfriend.com


"JVM melts your face."

Sex Appeal? This thing is orgasmic. It has the looks and the balls to back it up. It won't let you down.

This thing is just awesome. If you dare, dare. Probably the best value amp I've ever owned, and resell value is pretty good.

It looks awesome. Seems like some of the parts are kind of cheap to keep price down, like the knobs are cheap plastic. Seems like they put quality where it needs to be though, and that is inside the amp.

Haven't needed to deal with that yet.

Submitted: 10/9/2008 (Style of Music: Anything Rock)

I've had this for a year now and have only played it through the two cabs I mentioned above. It's an early model made within the first 3 months. (BTW – never a problem with the footswitch). For live situations I've only used it through the 1960AV. First impressions were that the tone was really thick, probably because it doesn't have the high end buzz that the 2205/2210 and other amps of its class had. After the novelty wore off I realized it's actually pretty thin and compressed. The whole thing lacks balls. The tone is generally bright and shrill. There's none of the traditional Marshall warmth and punch (ala JCM 800 and earlier). You can get some lows out of it mostly via the Resonance control, but that just adds sub-bass, which isn't conducive to a live context. It's feels like the power amp never really kicks in and takes over; when you turn up the Master(s), it just gets louder and brighter. There's no pick attack, there's only bright and brighter. In fact, the Mid knob seems more like what a treble control should be. The Presence and Treble controls only take this amp from bright to brighter and shriller. There's a certain "shwang" to the tone that just grates on my ears.

The OD1 Orange mode is the best this amp has to offer. But even that sounds thin, compressed and lacks expression. The OD2 channel's Mid control is just useless; scooped no matter what you do to it.

The Crunch channel's low-end is too unfocused for it to be useful for anything, though it does sound "rockin'" I suppose.

The Clean channel is not bad. It doesn't shimmer, but it is certainly brighter than Mesa's Rectifier clean channel.

I've tried almost $2,000 in speakers and $300 in tubes. The character of the amp remains what it is despite the differences tubes and speakers make.

This amp doesn't sound warm and electric, it sounds cold and electronic.

Marshall JVM 410 Head. I play it through a 1960A and a 1060AV, everything is completely stock, with the exception that I changed the amp's V1 to a TungSol 12AX7. The features are awesome, with the major exception that I would prefer there to be a Presence control on each channel like the Mesa Rectifier and other amps.

My review will heavily compare to the 3 channel Mesa Dual Rectifier.

It's been reliable, but it's built really cheap. The knobs move because they're not bolted to the faceplate like even my $179. Marshall MG15DFX is; they're simply slapped on a cascading PCB and poked through the holes, where a knob is placed on a plastic shaft (for this alone, Marshall should be ashamed). The pots aren't the typical qaulity large/round diaphram pots, they're cheapass mini-square pots on the PCB that can't be easily fixed. All the input jacks are plastic… everything… everything is as cheap as a Dell computer on this amp. You can love it all you want because of the money you spent, but you can't convince me that this doesn't fall below the quality line of even the original SS Valvestate series.

The bottom line here is, Marshall's JVM line IS the new Valvestate. It's BUILT like a Valvestate, LOOKS like a Valvestate, and most importantly, it SOUNDS just like an older Valvesate. The features are great, but in the end it doesn't sound like a nice big fat warm Marshall, it sounds quite like a computer motherboard, borderline hi-fi at least in some respects (but not at all like modelling).

I used to own a 2205 and a 2210, and have played a small handfull of earlier Marshalls. I can say without regret, that this doesn't live up to those standards. If you want quality, you'll have to look at either the Artist or Handwired series, pay a lot for them, and sacrifice features.

I like to believe Marshall tries hard, after all, they are my favorite tone of all time. But my ultimate opinion on the JVM is that it sounds like the next Valvestate and it's way overpriced. The Valvesate 2000 (AVT) failed, so now they decided to add a full tube compliment and call it a whole new series. But they still sound solid state-like, and tube changes have minimal effect on tone compared to the "real, old" tube counterparts.

It's time I got past the white logo and the old-time mistique, and moved on to better quality and tone for the money. I have a Mesa 3 Channel Dual Rectifier that, although it doesn't sound like a Marshall, it sure does please in tone and quality.

goodluckgettingmyemailadress@yahoo.com (01/25/2009)

Bugera 333 Guitar Amplifier Head (120 Watts)

Bugera 333 Guitar Amplifier Head (120 Watts)

 Manual en Espanol

Please Login or Register

 Spec Sheet

Please Login or Register

 Owner’s Manual

Please Login or Register

The Bugera 333 is the go-to guitar amp head for any rock, metal or hardcore band due to its raw tone, massive power and road-worthy reliability. Whether you want crystal clean punch, sultry smooth classic rock lead tones or that bone shattering metal crunch, the 333 provides extensive tone shaping abilities with virtually unlimited dynamics in a three channel configuration.

The 333’s brutal power comes from 4 hand-selected and matched Bugera 6L6 power valves. The 4 Bugera 12AX7 valves in the preamp add up for terrifying punch and mind-rattling gain.

Each channel features Volume, Bass, Mid and Treble, while the Crunch and Lead offer additional Gain control. We added Impedance switching to match virtually any speaker cabinet, from 4, 8 to 16 Ohms. Plus you’ll love the detail in the fine reverb tails. The amp comes with a four-way heavy-duty metal footswitch for channel and effects loop selection to tap your favorite effects.

This boutique-style amp is constructed using precision manufacturing, blended with our artisan hand assembly, so you can be confident it will stand the test of time. The next time you wield your axe, feel the Soul of Valves with the Bugera 333.

Bugera 333 Guitar Amplifier Head (120 Watts) Features…

Preamp Section

Valves

Type: 2 x 12AX7A, 2 x 12AX7

Preamp high-gain input

Impedance: 470 k

Clean channel

Nominal input level: -20 dBV

Min. input level: -30 dBV

Max. input level: 0 dBV

Crunch channel

Nominal input level: -80 dBV

Min. input level: -90 dBV

Lead channel

Nominal input level: -80 dBV

Min. input level: -90 dBV

Effects send

Impedance: 47 k or higher

Min. output level: -10 dBV, 300 mV RMS

Max. output level: 0 dBV, 1 V RMS

Effects return

Impedance: 470 k

Min. input sensitivity: -10 dBV

Max. input sensitivity: 0 dBV

Line output

Impedance: 47 k or higher

Adjustable output level: +/- 20 dBV

Power Amplifier Section

Valves

Type: 4 x 6L6GC

Output power

Peak power: 120 W / 16, 8, 4

Loudspeaker connectors

Type: 1/4 in. mono jack connectors, unbalanced

Load impedance: 4/8/16 switchable

Power Supply

Power consumption: Max. 350 W

Fuse:

T 3.15 A H 250 V (100 ­ 120 V~, 50/60 Hz)

T 1.6 A H 250 V (220 ­ 240 V~, 50/60 Hz)

Mains connection: Standard IEC receptacle

Dimensions/Weight

Dimensions (H x W x D): Approx. 9 25/32 x 27 x 9 11/16 in. (249 x 687.3 x 246 mm)

Weight: Approx. 47 lbs (21.5 kg)

Buy Bugera 333 Guitar Amplifier Head (120 Watts)
Buy at Zzounds.com

 Manual en Espanol

Please Login or Register

 Spec Sheet

Please Login or Register

 Owner’s Manual

Please Login or Register


I currently play rock and classic rock with a variety of guitars. I use Les Pauls, SG's, a Strat, PRS and a thinline hollowbody. This amp has that 70's rock sound in spades. I use it with the band I play with becuase I wanted a less expensive alternative to dragging my Marshall plexi around with me. No dissapointments yet. I really have only used the clean and crunch channels and both have been surprisingly good. My expectations were a lot lower given the price point and where it's made. I've had several comments about the overall sound and how full it really is. There are seperate eq controls for each channel which is nice too, but I rely on a eq pedal for dialing in the sound I want. At 120 watts, I've only had the master volume up to about 1/3 of full volume. I play Santana, Pink Floyd, Hendrix, Zepp and have had no trouble emulating those bands with this amp. That says alot. Granted, I use pedals here and there for some of the nuances, but the amp provides a solid foundation to build on.

Bugera is relatively new to the scene and they came strong. Mine is a new 2008. It's an all tube head with 6l6 power tubes. 120 watts, which is probably overkill unless you tour big venues. It's nice to have that kind of power on tap even if it is to satisfy your ego. It's a three channel head similar to the Peavey Triumph 120 that I used to own. Clean, Crunch and Lead. The lead channel seems a little "over the top" for the classic rock I like to play, but the head room would be perfect for those metal players. The clean and crunch channels are quite nice. The amp has an external FX loop with level control (nice) and built in reverb (never use it I have a pedal I like) Speaking of pedals, this amp loves them. You actually can get a nice overdriven sound through the crunch channel by adjusting the gain. The included footswitch is adequate an relatively sturdy. The control knobs on the the other hand are a little on the "chinzy" side and I fear they won't hold up.

The amp appears to be built well. There are some cheap plastic adornments that I could live without and, as mentioned above, the control knobs seem a little cheap. So far though no issues. I would gig it without a back-up right now because of the low hours on the tubes.

I've been playing several years. I own seven guitars, three amps, two cabs and a bazillion pedals. If it were stolen I'd buy another one in a flat second. For the money, this is the best value I've seen. I've played others in this price range and I still think this sounds best. The convertible power tubes is another reason to like this amp for the dollars. I've seen comparisons between this and a Mesa or 5150/6505. I've played both. It's NOT a MESA, it's NOT a 5150. It's a really nice amp for under $500.

Missedacut (05/30/2008)

I just recently landed an First Act Lola LE. And don't let their Wal-Mart counter-parts fool you. This guitar cranks. In my signal is a Boss Tuner, and thats that! I quit using a million pedals when I started playing on those 12 band shows where you have 10 minutes for change overs!

The Lola sounds crisp and nasty through the Bugera on teh lead channel! I can get a real nice bluesy tone with the neck pick-up (kinda like Seemless), and I can get a nice tight "modern style" distortion using the bridge pick-up. Big, heavy and thick. Those are the best words I have to describe it at this point.

The crunch channel reminds me of a Peavey Butcher, or a Plexi with a TS9 in the chain. Crunch is certainly the word for it. I can see it being used for some more subtle parts, and I really haven't explored this channel enough to give much more input than that.

The clean channel is crystal! I smacked the reverb in there a bit, and it was nice and smooth (wayy easier to dial in than the AT 100's clean tone). I don't have much use for it, but found myself tooling around with it for a long time today. really brings out the tones in My Lola too!

I've yet to crank this bastard up with my drummer, and full band… but think it can handle it as good as, if not better, than the AT 100 has for the past 4 years!

I see alot of people comparing them to the 5150's, 6505's and JSX's. I have never owned any of thos amps, so I can't really compare it to them. I CAN however compare it to my AT 100. To me the tone on the Bugera seems tighter, more defined, and much thicker than what I got out of my AT100 at times. While it may not be made as durable as the AT 100 (plastic decorative pieces), the actual tube sockets look decent, as does the over all build of the amp (though I haven't looked inside at the actual wiring at this point)

I'd say that if you were in a heavy band, and were looking for that tone… this amp can get it. I got mine on Ebay for 459.00 plus shipping, and it came new in the box… so I'm willing to see what it's got for that price. Play my first gig with it in a week, so I'll let you know how she handles that!

This amp is relatively new to the scene, but it's not the first time I have taken a chance on a newbie (Bought a B52 At100 when they first came out). I have to say I'm impressed. read some reviews that have been dogging this amp, and then some praising it… so of course I was on the fence for a while about it. I'm actuall glad I dropped the $522.00 (including shipping) for the thing.

Now the amp has only been in my house for 12 hours, but I have been toying with it almost the entire day, tweaking the clean channel, experimenting with the gain, finding the depth to the reverb, etc. etc. So far so good.

I play in a modern metal band, and this amp certainly has the kick and the power to do what I need it to do, whether it be a back up… or my main rig. 3 very differnt channels, that can go from sparkly clean to trailerpark dirty in a flash. It looks pretty solidly built (minus the actual logo, and decorative pieces on the front of the amp) They are made of plastic, and I can see them being broken before too long if you gig heavily. The knobs are made of plastic like stuff too, and though the pots feel clean, the knobs are first on my list to replace with some solid metal ones.

The amp has 120 watts of power driven by 6L6's, and can be biased for EL34's as well. 12AX7 pre-amp tubes, and switchable ohmage for ust about any type of cab set-up.

I am obviously a little spooked about some of the reviews I have read about it being made of cheap wiring, etc… So for a while I'll use it as my main, but bring the At 100 along for back-up. Keeping teh fingers crossed though!

Ringing it in a 7 just because some reviews have me a lil spooked!

She gets a 10 for now. solid construction for the most part (the plastic decortive **** does nothing for me… but it doesn't effect the sound). Big fat gain, and thickness you couldn't pour out of a Heinz 57 bottle! I think for $439.00 I'll get my money's worth out of her.

I'll let you know more after her virgin gig!

Dwr3k (03/21/2008)

Leave a Comment

Vox DA10 Digital Guitar Combo Amplifier (10 Watt, 2 x6.5 in.) vs. Marshall MG10KK Limited Edition Kerry King Guitar Combo Amplifier

Vox DA10 Digital Guitar Combo Amplifier (10 Watt, 2 x6.5 in.)

Vox DA10 Digital Guitar Combo Amplifier (10 Watt, 2 x6.5 in.)

Based on the popular DA5 Digital Amp, the new DA10 combines higher power with the same great tone and go-anywhere portability of their smaller sibling. And like the DA5, it offers the option of running on battery power, so you can take the jam session literally anywhere!

Loaded with tone, at home or to go

The 10-Watt DA10 offers 11 distinctive sound styles ranging from clean to high gain, 11 great sounding, digital effects, a “knob-based†control panel that’s really easy to use, plus a whole lot more. Designed to take the show on the road, both of the new DA amps can be cranked up at 5 Watts on battery power (6 x C batteries, not included).

Great sounding effects

The versatility of the DA10 and DA20 extends to a full complement of 11 digital effects. Both amps feature auto-wah, chorus + delay, chorus + reverb, compressor, compressor + chorus, compressor + phaser, delay, flanger + reverb, reverb, rotary + reverb, and tremolo + reverb. There’s also a Tap Button that makes it easy to set the delay time or modulation speed. And like the larger AD Series or “Valvetronix†amps, editing the effects parameters on the DA10 and DA20 is simple.

Double up the tone

The DA10 is equipped with two VOX original design speakers. The DA10 is loaded with 2 x 6.5†speakers, while the DA20 packs a punch with 2 x 8†speakers. With the VOX DA amplifiers, you don’t have to sacrifice great tone for portability and ease of use!

Play it anywhere, any way!

The DA10 can be powered by its AC adapter or by six C batteries. A built-in output power switch (MAX, 1.5W, 0.5W) helps extend battery life and lets you play at lower volume without losing any tone or feel.

That’s not the only trick these tone machines have to offer. The DA10 comes equipped with an aux in which allows you to connect an external audio device such as a cd or mp3 player, plus a mic input to connect a microphone. Just plug your guitar in, and you can play and sing along with your favorite band or recording!

Great for practicing and recording.

The DA10 is equipped with a combination line/headphone output so you can connect to a headphone, mixer or recorder. The amps’ emulated line out provides a full, realistic sound whether you’re recording direct or listening through headphones. And since plugging into the jack defeats the speaker output, you can practice when you want, where you want, and as loud as you want in total privacy.

VOX DA10, great sounding. Great looking too.

Vox DA10 Digital Guitar Combo Amplifier (10 Watt, 2 x6.5 in.) Features…

Number of amp types: 11

Number of effects: 11

Noise reduction: 1

Input/output jacks: 1 x input, 1 x aux in jack, 1 x mic input, 1 x line/phone

Power amp output: Maximum 10W RMS @ 8ohms

Speaker: 2 x VOX original (6.5 in. 8 ohm)

Buy Vox DA10 Digital Guitar Combo Amplifier (10 Watt, 2 x6.5 in.)
Buy at Zzounds.com


"never buy another metal amp without lookin at this one because its like as good as you can get it for that price."

it makes you look like a true rocker and keeps you rolling for the color. i never seen so small of a little amp look so good without makin you feel cheap by havin a ragid old amp. this has great texture and has not one design flaw. u just cant beat it.

its a great steal but it would be unstoppable if it was 159.99 not 200.00

its great for an on the road band and is very sturdy and i cranked it up all the way, played it while sitting on it and in still didnt break in any way. this is reliable for all u crazy metal fans!!! i cant think of one bad thing about this except the price. i wish it was 159.99 not 200.00

i say this is a great buy because its sturdy and i play this evry week and just cant be beat at anything. let this monster rock your house!!!!!!!!!!

a customer from aol.com (12/4/2007)

Marshall MG10KK Limited Edition Kerry King Guitar Combo Amplifier

Marshall MG10KK Limited Edition Kerry King Guitar Combo Amplifier

The Marshall MG10KK Kerry King Guitar Combo Amp packs a huge punch into a small package. The MG10KK is very easy to use but allows for a variety of tone adjustments including clean, tone contour, and of course an overdrive that will melt your face. A CD input is also included so you can jam along with a favorite Slayer song or anything else you would like. The MG10KK also features a emulated line out for recording as well as a emulated headphone output for silent practice.

Marshall MG10KK Limited Edition Kerry King Guitar Combo Amplifier Features…

Output (RMS): 10 Watt

Channels: 2

CD Input: Yes

Emulated Line Out: Yes

Emulated Headphone Out: Yes

FDD (Frequency Dependent Damping): Yes

Speaker: 1 x 6.5 inch

Dimensions: 11.6 x 12.2 x 7.4 inches

Weight: 11 lbs.

Buy Marshall MG10KK Limited Edition Kerry King Guitar Combo Amplifier
Buy at Zzounds.comBuy at Musiciansfriend.com


Fender strat with Dime pickup in the bridge. I like playing metal/heavy metal. A good player can make any amp sound great. With that in mind, this amp is built and advertised and played with metal in mind. The amp has plenty of gain and sustain for metal and the pick attack was great. With the watts max at 10, it's easy to turn the volume up to 7 or 9 with the overdirve around 3:00 o'clock / FDD engaged/ brige pickup and jam till the room melts (or cops are called). Load little amp and ample/potable enough for quick garage attacts. Pick attach is defined and crisp. Heavy on the lower E strings and gallops. Can be adjusted to play AC/DC to Megadeth to Children of Bodom. I would not suggest buying this if you plan on discovering your softer sweeter side. Get this amp to have some fun with real music and discover/prove why metal can not be killed.

Made last of 2007. Metal. 2 channels. Practice and a little recording. Lots of power per watt. Solid state. Use at home and recording studio.

Solid state is the way to go. no testy tubes or complex settings that could move around on ya. I would use without back up. If backup is needed, buy two of these. They're cheap! -and loads of fun.

12 years. I've had a Mase, other Marshalls, Spider II 30W, Peavy.

megaroach (03/10/2008)
SWEET!

This might be the best mini amp I have ever used. I still has that great marshall tone for the fraction of the price. The clean is unbelievable plus the OD gets tones from Kerry King(of course), SRV, and Jimi. Don't let the 10 watts fool you. When you crank the volume, the thing can get pretty loud. This is the loudest, best, and most affordable mini amp ever. If you're gigging, buy a 100 watt MG for the same tone, it's just louder.

ibanezPRSfenderGIBSONjackson (Aug 14, 2008)

Leave a Comment