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Marshall Code 25 Digital Modeling Guitar Amplifier

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Related review

icthus 2024-04-21 04:32:17

[1.7 lb] I bought my first Falcon/Marshall in the early 1990's for about $. My family and I have used it constantly for the last 25+ years. It is outstanding. It's a simple design, the blades are cheap so you don't use them to the very last drop, and the mechanics cannot be improved upon - unless you'd make it all metal in which case it would be prohibitively expensive. I bought a new one just because I wanted a back-up when my current one wears out - I'm so thrilled. And I love the new color - mine was originally white but is now that ulgy yellowed plastic color. The aged color, however, doesn't affect its performance, hence 5 stars especially given the new color. Yea.

5
Ben 2024-08-08 04:22:45

[DB-9
DB-25] Purchased one of these for use with 4 Marshall CV605BK PTZ cams. They connected right away over ONVIF and also VISCA IP. It has most of the basic functions. Construction is all-metal and buttons, knobs, rocker, joystick all feel robust. The joystick is slow and smooth enough for on-camera moves, but the zoom (likely a camera limitation) so far has been on the fast side. It's also great having focus, color, iris buttons at your fingertips. Only gripe is that the Marshall camera's on screen menu is not working to select menu items. But I may not be doing something right. You can always use the camera's web interface or IR remote for detailed configuration. It also can't seem to connect to Panasonic PTZ cameras like the UE150, which isn't a huge deal for me since we use the RP150 for those. I was hoping that I could have several of these on a gig for quick adjustments to those cameras. Again, not a deal breaker. Anyway, we liked it so much that I bought a second one. Might pick up a few more.

5
anyonymous 2024-04-17 09:54:24

[Yes] I've always bought Marshall for all my amplification needs (I have a 40 year old guitar amp) and this didn't disappoint and a carries on the great Marshall heritage and story. Build and sound quality is as you would expect from a company that has over 50 years of amplification technology behind it

5
P 2024-05-29 09:35:33

[1.35 lb] I bought this for my Marshall DSL1 as a boost pedal. Every guitar player knows what I'm talking about. The pedal is made in Japan

5
P 2024-08-27 07:24:19

I bought this for my Marshall DSL1 as a boost pedal. Every guitar player knows what I'm talking about. The pedal is made in Japan

5
William 0000-00-00 00:00:00

[Class-D] I purchased a second BR-10 to complete a PA system I use with a Fender guitar/Yamaha modeling amp combo. I get the sound I like and then let it rip. Clean, powerful and impressively responsive across the entire frequency range. Way more than enough for 1500 sq ft of audience (~200 people). Can switch to pure PA use without problems and nobody is going to gripe about this rig. Wish I had this setup when I started doing gigs.

5
anyonymous 2024-04-02 06:13:52

[1] From time to time, I need the use the guitar input of my amplifier for a second microphone input - this gizmo enables me to do that withous issues.

5
anyonymous 0000-00-00 00:00:00

[USB-C] I like my Marshall.

5
Kyle 0000-00-00 00:00:00

[Active 2-Way] I bought a pair of these to use with a guitar amp simulator. They sound great and allow for getting the amplifier and effects tone without having to crank up the volume to concert levels.

5
Dennis 2024-04-02 01:17:15

[Download] In 1969 I saw a solid-body electric guitar with a three-inch amplifier built into the face of the guitar. The tiny speaker was powered by a nine-volt battery inserted in the back of the instrument. Fantastic, I thought, why don't they make a suction-cup amp that sticks onto the face of the guitar? A zillion years later they did and it is fine.

5