Log in
Log in

or
Create an account

or
< All Marshall AVT150 reviews
Add this product to
  • My former gear
  • My current gear
  • My wishlist
Marshall AVT150
Images
1/40
Marshall AVT150
Price engine
Classified Ads
Forums
MGR/James Hutton MGR/James Hutton

« Marshall AVT150 »

Published on 12/03/01 at 15:00
Concept Music
$1400 AUD

This is a great practice amp. It is the same as the AVT-275, with only one speaker. It can be upgraded to the equivalent of an AVT-275 with the purchase of a second speaker unit. It can also be used to run a marshall quad box. It has 4 channels, Acoustic, clean, OD1 and OD2. It has a large selection of digital effects. There are great reverb, chorus and delay effects. The acoustic channel is a nice surprise. The clean channel is 'Marshall good' and so is the overdrive 1 channel. Using these two channels with varied settings you can replicate many sounds from bands using combinations of soft to harder overdrives. It packs a punch for a small amp, with a great tone for most sounds. The tone controls (bass, middle, treble) are very effective in perfecting your prefered sound.

If you are looking for a real heavy sound using a pedal through the clean channel make sure the gain down or your sound will become to muddy. This limits your volume potential, although this amp does pack a fair punch for a single speaker combo. The OD2 channel I do not like. The sound is not very heavy and is VERY dirty. You are better of using a pedal, since it will provide a heavier sound with less noise. There is a huge selection of reverb effects which differ very little from each other, so I haven't found them to be very useful. The rotary selector for the channels is hard to use if you wanted to quickly change effects while playing.

Rock solid !!! Pun intended :)

While some of the features would of been better of left out the good ones are really good. A versatile practice amp with great tone, volume and effects. Makes it a great amp to learn on since it is so versatile and has many effects so you do not have to fork out extra cash to have a large repertoire of effects to learn how to use them all.

This review was originally published on http://www.musicgearreview.com