Отзывы о Roland комбоусилитель CUBE-10GX
172 отзывов пользователей o Roland комбоусилитель CUBE-10GX
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Roland комбоусилитель CUBE-10GX?
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Rolandの40ワットのアンプも所有してますが、持ち運びが楽な物を欲しくて購入しました。
この後にCUBE10を購入したので、今はあまり出番がなくなってしまいましたが、コスパ的にはありかと思いますよ


おすすめします。


On the plus side, the Cube has a very nice tonal signature, with the character of each of my guitars showing through admirably. There is absolutely no solid-state edginess or hash. Just high-quality, accurate tonality. The preamp offers very good control over tone/volume paramaters, with no undue dulling of the tone. The 8-inch speaker covers the frequency range of a guitar with no strain.
However. There is a "thickness" to the sound that, while not unpleasant, just fails to reveal the details of, say, a chord, especially in the lower register. On a good amp, the individual notes of a chord should be clearly heard. The Cube simply does not allow that kind of detail to show through. Compensating adjustments to tone controls always resulted in a different aspect of the sound quality to suffer.
This would be forgivable in a $130 amp that didn't have a reputation as a giant killer. For me, it failed to inspire continued use. I just defaulted to other amps.
So, not bad... but not the $500 dollar amp for $130 I'd been led to expect. I probably should know better....

*Update 1* I was able to load acoustic amp model from iPhone through headphone adapter. Have an old Ovation that hadn't been played in awhile. Plugged in and was playing in minutes. The guitar has a new life.
*Update 2* Bought an RC NiMH battery pack (~7 volts) and a voltage regulator here on Amazon and made a battery PSU. Works great and can go for hours with no difference in functionality with respect to wall power. Also had to buy the plug for connection to the regulator, a charger and a connector dongle for hooking up the regulator, no soldering required, just snip/strip & screw down terminals (enclosure still needed). Regulator is set at 5.8 Volts, and draws about 0.1 amps turned on sitting still and about 0.7 amps at a volume the neighbors won't get mad. Not bad.

Also, the reverb and delay are all in one knob, and you can't set the variations manually. It's also a little loud for a small, quiet practice amp.
So it kind of fails as a small size personal practice amp, if you are trying to emulate lots of different sounds. I ended up with the Mighty light Nu-x, which is cheaper, has a ridiculously small speaker, but is not bad.
I was looking for a small sized amp that sounded better, but I don't think I found one yet. I tried the small Vox, Fender, Marshall even Blackstar (Fly, Beam, ID Core). All these really don't sound that great to me.
My favorite amp is the Boss Kantana 50, just for comparison.



This amp is absolutely loud enough for me. Gets over my noisy music groups no problem. Might keep up with a drummer in a practice setting if they aren't an idiot but I havent tried. It is sensitive at it's lowest settings like others say, but it's really not a big deal.
This amp comes with an adapter, which is fine. I sometimes wish it had a fixed cable but it hasn't bothered me much. The bigger amps in this series do, if that matters to you.
It is stupid light and a perfect size. And it seems really well built. And its really REALLY inexpensive.
I use it on both keyboards and guitar.
The effects are fine. I usually use a bit of echo or reverb.
The app is kinda clumsy, but I used it exactly ONCE to put the models I want on it.
Heres the big thing about the amp models... THEY SOUND AWESOME. With the three I have loaded (JC Clean, Tweed, Orange) it is hard to make a bad sound. Put all the eq's at noonish, don't over think it. I typically crank the gain up all the way and set the volume as needed. Heres what that gets me - the JC breaks up a bit but stays pretty clean and FAT. Like it has a compressor on but a good dynamic one. The tweed is very dynamic, and can get a good roots rock or blues thing going. Can get fairly hairy with hot pickups in a really nice way. Cleans up with volume or pick dynamic. The Orange - Forget the other metal settings - use the Orange Stack. Stick a pedal in front if you need more gain. But you probably dont, because this one chugs and chugs. It is really open and thick sounding, not fizzy like the rectifier seems to be for lots of people.
On any of these settings, with the gain up high - this amp feels and sounds like it is opened up to it's "happy place" (if you use tube amps you know what I mean here) even at manageable volumes. It responds well to your playing and sounds nice and full.
TLDR: This amp is good, its cheap, use the JC, Tweed, and Orange. Get it.














