New Roland 80 xl
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
-
- Posts: 472
- Joined: 18 Nov 2010 3:19 pm
- Location: Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
New Roland 80 xl
I know this amp has been extensively discussed on the forum but I just got a new one last week. It is excellent for any price but for $325 it's incredible. I don't use all the modeling features, just set it on black face, adjust the EQ for the room and give it some plate reverb. And it only weighs 35 lbs!
2016 Williams D12 8 x 8, 2015 Williams D12 8 x 8, 2023 Williams S12 4 x 5, Milkman Amps, 1974 Gibson Byrdland
- Lee Baucum
- Posts: 10326
- Joined: 11 Apr 1999 12:01 am
- Location: McAllen, Texas (Extreme South) The Final Frontier
Yep. Looks like Roland accidentally hit a home run for the steel guitar community.
Lee, from South Texas - Down On The Rio Grande
There are only two options as I see it.
Either I'm right, or there is a sinister conspiracy to conceal the fact that I'm right.
Williams Keyless S-10, BMI S-10, Evans FET-500LV, Fender Steel King, 2 Roland Cube 80XL's,
Sarno FreeLoader, Goodrich Passive Volume Pedals, Vintage ACE Pack-A-Seat
There are only two options as I see it.
Either I'm right, or there is a sinister conspiracy to conceal the fact that I'm right.
Williams Keyless S-10, BMI S-10, Evans FET-500LV, Fender Steel King, 2 Roland Cube 80XL's,
Sarno FreeLoader, Goodrich Passive Volume Pedals, Vintage ACE Pack-A-Seat
-
- Posts: 1440
- Joined: 2 Nov 2006 1:01 am
- Location: Pennsylvania, USA
Roland 80 XL..great little amp.
Steve Mueller, The Roland 80 XL is a perfect match for my Williams Steel... I now have 4 amps but only use the Roland 80 XL..glad you like yours.
Roland 80 XL
I did a search on the forum on this amp and I've never seen an amp get as many high ratings as this one. It must be good.
Sho-Bud Pro III
Pro-Fex II
Peavey PX 300
Pro-Fex II
Peavey PX 300
-
- Posts: 810
- Joined: 8 Nov 2004 1:01 am
- Location: Sparta, Kentucky, USA
- Bill Moore
- Posts: 2099
- Joined: 5 Jun 2000 12:01 am
- Location: Manchester, Michigan
- Henry Matthews
- Posts: 3974
- Joined: 7 Mar 2002 1:01 am
- Location: Texarkana, Ark USA
I've got the Cube 80 that I bought for a steel amp but have only played it once with steel. My LTD blows it away tone wise, however, I do play six string and fiddle thru it and it sounds great. For steel is ok but prefer the LTD on Nashville 112.
Henry Matthews
D-10 Magnum, 8 &5, dark rose color
D-10 1974 Emmons cut tail, fat back,rosewood, 8&5
Nashville 112 amp, Fishman Loudbox Performer amp, Hilton pedal, Goodrich pedal,BJS bar, Kyser picks, Live steel Strings. No effects, doodads or stomp boxes.
D-10 Magnum, 8 &5, dark rose color
D-10 1974 Emmons cut tail, fat back,rosewood, 8&5
Nashville 112 amp, Fishman Loudbox Performer amp, Hilton pedal, Goodrich pedal,BJS bar, Kyser picks, Live steel Strings. No effects, doodads or stomp boxes.
-
- Posts: 515
- Joined: 1 Jul 2008 11:13 am
- Location: New Hampshire, USA
Got mine delivered late Friday afternoon and played a Halloween party gig Saturday night. The guys in the band said it sounded "wicked good" and seemed to get even better as the night wore on--break-in? Even members of the audience who've heard us many times commented on how I sounded extra good. The clarity--by comparison the 112 would sound muddy.
I used the JC Clean channel with the highs, presence and mids all at around 10:00, bass at 3:00, plate rev at 3:00, and a little delay at about a half second.
I'm happy camper with this little baby
I used the JC Clean channel with the highs, presence and mids all at around 10:00, bass at 3:00, plate rev at 3:00, and a little delay at about a half second.
I'm happy camper with this little baby
- Darvin Willhoite
- Posts: 5715
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Roxton, Tx. USA
I have an 80X, and an 80XL, and I like them a lot for guitar and steel both.
Darvin Willhoite
MSA Millennium, Legend, and Studio Pro, Reese's restored Universal Direction guitar, as well as some older MSAs, several amps, new and old, and a Kemper Powerhead that I am really liking. Recently added a Zum D10, a Mullen RP, and a restored blue Rose, named the "Blue Bird" to the herd. Also, I have acquired and restored the plexiglass D10 MSA Classic again that was built as a demo in the early '70s. I also added a '74 lacquer P/P, with wood necks.
MSA Millennium, Legend, and Studio Pro, Reese's restored Universal Direction guitar, as well as some older MSAs, several amps, new and old, and a Kemper Powerhead that I am really liking. Recently added a Zum D10, a Mullen RP, and a restored blue Rose, named the "Blue Bird" to the herd. Also, I have acquired and restored the plexiglass D10 MSA Classic again that was built as a demo in the early '70s. I also added a '74 lacquer P/P, with wood necks.
-
- Posts: 472
- Joined: 18 Nov 2010 3:19 pm
- Location: Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
I called the local Guitar Center in Cincinnati and they made me a deal for $325 plus tax and shipped it to my house free in 4 days. I also could have bought it through Sam Ash for $340 with free shipping but I liked the guy at Guitar Center
2016 Williams D12 8 x 8, 2015 Williams D12 8 x 8, 2023 Williams S12 4 x 5, Milkman Amps, 1974 Gibson Byrdland
- Alex Cattaneo
- Posts: 986
- Joined: 17 Sep 2010 9:01 pm
- Location: Quebec, Canada
Picked one up on Craigslist for 260$! Mint!!
Played it on a couple fo gigs, so far so good but...
Headphone output has this constant hiss, very unpleasant. Will try it with another pair of headphones, but these were SONY professional studio headphones so...
Also, the line out was so noisy that the soundman elected to mic the amp instead... not a good omen for home recording purposes... more on that later when I get home and try it in my home studio setup.
On the plus side, the amp is 16 pounds lighter then my NV400 (w EPS-15 speaker) and the onboard delay is a nice bonus.
Played it on a couple fo gigs, so far so good but...
Headphone output has this constant hiss, very unpleasant. Will try it with another pair of headphones, but these were SONY professional studio headphones so...
Also, the line out was so noisy that the soundman elected to mic the amp instead... not a good omen for home recording purposes... more on that later when I get home and try it in my home studio setup.
On the plus side, the amp is 16 pounds lighter then my NV400 (w EPS-15 speaker) and the onboard delay is a nice bonus.
Don't have the 80- but have used twin 60's for the last ten years-my steel-my guitar and more importantly my back loves them !
The sound is amazing-the weight is even better and the price is hardly noticable
compared to all those big boys we all used!
The sound is amazing-the weight is even better and the price is hardly noticable
compared to all those big boys we all used!
Nice ZUM 12 D9 2 Roland Cubes,+ various effects and bits.
- David Mason
- Posts: 6072
- Joined: 6 Oct 2001 12:01 am
- Location: Cambridge, MD, USA
There have been a whole slew of open=backed amps that happened to sound good, but apparently we had to wait for Roland to apply basic speaker technology to the combo amp...
Thiele-Small Parameters:
http://www.eminence.com/support/underst ... aker-data/
Thiele-Small Parameters:
http://www.eminence.com/support/underst ... aker-data/
Roland amps
So David- are we saying in a roundabout way (after reading the Eminence spec)
that a 10" Eminence fitted to my Cube 60 would make the amp even better?
The Eminence 15" in my Evans FET 500 was miles better than the Black Widow I had installed in it whilst the Eminence was being repaired!
that a 10" Eminence fitted to my Cube 60 would make the amp even better?
The Eminence 15" in my Evans FET 500 was miles better than the Black Widow I had installed in it whilst the Eminence was being repaired!
Nice ZUM 12 D9 2 Roland Cubes,+ various effects and bits.
- Stephen Cowell
- Posts: 2875
- Joined: 6 Jan 2012 8:13 am
- Location: Round Rock, Texas, USA
I believe what he's relating is that the Roland cabinets are designed using the S-T parameters. This design makes the best possible use of the cabinet volume to achieve the best bass response... in effect, the port is designed to 'split' the bass 'hump' and even it out, sacrificing absolute bass output for an evener, wider response across the whole lower spectrum, instead of having a large peak at one frequency. It's a hi-fi way to design a cabinet... most good hi-fi speakers with ports use the Small-Theile design.
If you change the speaker, you will probably change the S-T parameters that the cabinet/port system was designed for... a turkey shoot, IOW. Open-back systems don't really care so much (unless the speaker wasn't meant for open-back use). I don't recommend changing anything about the closed-back Roland amps... they're highly tweaked from the factory.
If you change the speaker, you will probably change the S-T parameters that the cabinet/port system was designed for... a turkey shoot, IOW. Open-back systems don't really care so much (unless the speaker wasn't meant for open-back use). I don't recommend changing anything about the closed-back Roland amps... they're highly tweaked from the factory.
New FB Page: Lap Steel Licks And Stuff: https://www.facebook.com/groups/195394851800329