Vox AC 30 Headphone Amp
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
Vox AC 30 Headphone Amp
I am thinking about buying this amp. I understand there are better ones on the market, but for significantly more $$$. This one will be used for practice and mostly for travel, so I don't want to spent too much (plus my lap steel is a cheapo so tone is probably not ideal anyway). I did a search and didn't come up with a lot. Anyone have any opinions on these?
Thanks, Mike
Thanks, Mike
- Brad Bechtel
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Moved to Electronics.
Brad’s Page of Steel
A web site devoted to acoustic & electric lap steel guitars
A web site devoted to acoustic & electric lap steel guitars
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MJ...
..I have the Vox unit, and while it is obviously limited, it is fine for me for practice sessions to keep the juices going...
...in fact i bought the bass version for my son as well, and he loves that..
Probably it is more important to have access to good quality, comfortable headphones
Happy New Year from DownUnder
..I have the Vox unit, and while it is obviously limited, it is fine for me for practice sessions to keep the juices going...
...in fact i bought the bass version for my son as well, and he loves that..
Probably it is more important to have access to good quality, comfortable headphones
Happy New Year from DownUnder
If my wife is reading this, I don't have much stuff....really!
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No reverb. I almost always have a little bit of reverb dialed in on my amp whenever I'm playing, but I don't seem to miss it with the Amplug. It's got kind of a tube like fullness to it. Vox does make some Amplugs with a little delay built in (Lead and Joe Satriani models), but they're higher gain/distortion types.Jim Cohen wrote:Do they have any reverb, or are they bone dry?
-Don
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I tried all the Vox headphone amps, and to my ears, the Bass version worked best for pedal steel. All the others had built-in distortion, ugh.
E9 INSTRUCTION
If you want to have an ongoing discussion, please email me, don't use the Forum messaging which I detest! steelguitarlessons@earthlink.net
If you want to have an ongoing discussion, please email me, don't use the Forum messaging which I detest! steelguitarlessons@earthlink.net
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I use the iRig app/connector. I like the Fender version better - I think it's a nicer tone, but I often bypass the amp modeller anyway.M J Scott wrote:Having done a bit more study-does anyone have an opinion on the iRig?
Nice thing about the iRig app is you can import your songs from iTunes and play along. There's also a phrase trainer to let you select a start/stop point of a section of a song you are working on, slow it down, speed it up. (If only it could transpose.)
I like it. Good practice tool.
- James Holland
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I played around with my son's last night, and a tele while UA drummed ND. It was a stocking stuffer...from me. It was ok, but not much better than the $20 cheapo I gave him years ago, that finally cracked to pieces. It did drive my larger headphones just fine. I think I paid $40? And no reverb was hard to get used to.
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