1.5-watt, 1x2.5" Battery-powered Guitar Combo Amplifier with Tone and Overdrive Knobs and Headphone Output - Aqua
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Specifications |
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Brand | Danelectro | ||
Category | Guitar Combo Amps | ||
Type: | Solid State, | ||
Number of Channels: | 1, | ||
Total Power: | 1.5W, | ||
Speaker Size: | 1 x 2.5", | ||
Effects: | Overdrive, | ||
EQ: | Tone control, | ||
Inputs: | 1 x 1/4", | ||
Headphones: | 1 x 1/8", | ||
Construction Material: | Aqua Plastic, | ||
Power Source: | 9V battery / 9V AC adapter, | ||
Height: | 5", | ||
Width: | 5.25", | ||
Depth: | 2.25", | ||
Manufacturer Part Number: | N-10A, |
I love this little amp
I was wanting a micro amp for traveling and for when i'm to lazy to bust out my fender mustang. It runs great on 9v batteries you just have to keep the volume low (Halfway if you want it loud with out it cutting out) but the way i use it is i use my petal power supply or a 9v 300 milliamp power cord. So yeah i give it 5/5 stars
Great For Practicing Anytime
This is a very useful little item to have and I was pleasantly surprised with the sound. Being that it runs off of a 9 volt battery, it's great for taking around for practicing or coming up with song ideas. I've had it on my nightstand and the coffee table so it's nice to get out of my music room where the amps are.
The Best Jazz Amp
This amp makes the most retro, smokey jazz sounds of any amp. Refer to my video for the proof. Take this to your next gig and put a mic in front of it. Effects? While needs effects? This is tone baby! But it handles effects well too. In fact, put it on a pedal board with a delay and looper running into it and you have a real nice ppractice, gigging, and recording rig. Am I crazy?… read more Yes. Am I wrong? No way.
Way more than I expected
I just bought a Fender Hot Rod DeVille and I needed something way quieter to use for practice. I decided to go with this; I figured it would be a step-up from headphones and be loud enough for a bedroom. Heads up: this thing is loud. If you went out on the balcony and played people would hear you up and down the street. It's incredible. As for the tone, it sounds very obviously… read more like a cheap solid-state amp, but then again that's exactly what I expected, and anyways that's pretty much all you get from FET-overdrive pedals anyway. It sounds less like overdrive and more like a very brittle Germanium-based Fuzz pedal. Anyways, when you turn it up you'll get insane feedback and gain that's probably twice as heavy as a tube-screamer. The only drawback is the headroom is pretty low, and it tends to be lacking on clean tones. As for construction, it has a metal input jack, wiggle-free knobs, and very thick plastic construction. If you drop it, it might not survive, but it's definitely gonna hold up against scratches and getting crushed at the bottom of a bag. Anyways, the reason I think it is so good is the fact that it is 22 dollars. That's crazy low! Most people will pay 100 dollars for an overdrive pedal that sounds exactly like this, but those can't even make sound without an amp attached. This does it all!
The perfect partner for my Danelectro Aqua
Well, I just had to have it. It's so cool looking and goes well with my new Danelectro Aqua guitar. Sounds better than I thought it would. Even my wife who was understandably skeptical, was surprised by the output. (Would have given 5 stars if the color was a better match to my guitar. I guess all aqua's are not the same).
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