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Boss GT-3

Summary
Price New Boss GT-3 @ Musician's Friend
Manufacturer URL http://www.bossus.com/
Ease of Use 7.9 (318 responses)
Sound Quality 8.1 (318 responses)
Reliability 9.4 (291 responses)
Customer Support 7.6 (67 responses)
Overall Rating 8.5 (306 responses)
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Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: USD 150 USED
Submitted 09/17/2009 at 05:25am by Rocko

Ease of Use : 7
well... as a previous boss user i know the drill about sound editing so it was pretty easy for me to get a good sound.. just about 10 minutes and i replicated some of the sounds that i've programmed in my previous unit(boss me-10)

about editing patches you have 12 modules, its easy to edit if you use basic effects but if you want like 8 or more its kinda tricky specially the pedal/assign module and the manual it's not that explanatory

the manual is quite big in size but sometimes its confusing in its terms but if you know about guitar effects it can be pretty easy

Firmware.. well i bought used so i dont know if the previous owner updated the firmware, but i really doubt it because im in mexico and its not that easy to do that in here

Sound Quality : 8
well my rig it's easy one dean playmate an washburn(cheap model) and a SG clone a dunlop crybaby standard, a zoom hyper lead distortion unit the boss gt-3 and my 40w amp

this unit if it is properly configured it can be quite noiseless(it has a noise supressor) the only noise i detect it,s my CRT computer monitor but it's normal i just turn it off and the noise its gone

if you like tweaking your effects it can be a pretty good unit, however some preset's can do job very well, the weak effects are the harmonizer, sometimes cant track very well unless you do some tweaks, the wah(lack's of frequency Q) the acoustic simulator its good but its a simulator so you wont be fooling anyone.. also the synth it's pretty lame specially when tracking but again it's a multi effect not a dedicated unit(also i dont use it) now the good features about thing... the modulation module its quite good, chorus, flanger, phaser slow gear and slicer(one of my favorite ones), it has great distortions(analog circuit) so it can do the job but then itgoes trough the other digital effects so it loses some of the magic, the pre amps are quite good but emulated i think in amp simulation the best right now are line 6, good delays . good EQ's a fair reverb also the auto riff its a good feature to do some weird noises and my personal favorite the manual mode, with this you can enable disable 7 effects

i like creating my sounds but also like to sound like others with this you can get close to that but un less you have some of you favorite artist rig you cant get the exact sound however with this you can get really close and even fool some amateurs

Reliability : 9
i never gig with my gt-3 but soon i will and i think it will do the job pretty well

i previously own a boss and i gig with it and i have no problem

in a gig sure i will use it with a backup its a boss so it can resist anything its build with metal and by the way its used but the brand its reliable

Customer Support : No Opinion
i never dealt with boss here in mexico because there are nowhere to go

my previous unit (boss me-10) fail me a month ago and the gt-3 its the succesor but the old unit and i mean old was 12 years old of extreme abuse so it did last pretty well

Overall Rating : 8
i play mainly rock(from chuck berry to new stuff and all in between) so this thing can match up really good an i can get almost every sound i like, also a like to experiment with electronic music, conceptual music so the unit and some of the effects can really create an unique sound

i've been playing since 2003 and i used a lot of gear(1 digitech,4 zoom, 1 korg, 3 boss) when i got my previous boss unit i decided to stay with the brand and it was a good choise

if it get stolen i would love to get another one back but its quite hard to find it here so i will upgrade to a gt-8 or a gt-10

i love the distortion unit because its analog circuit and the selection of effects, and as i say i love the manual mode and the CTL because i can switch from distorted to clean in the same patch or turn on/off any efeccts, ant the chain order feature it really helps when creating souns

now i own my first multi/fx a digitech Rp 50 and there is no point of comparision but i still use it to practice or when i dont want to carry the goos stuff,

also i have 2 zoom units the 707II that was my first good look at tweaking and i still love some of the sounds but the unit its on sale an the new g2 wich i found very easy to use and i use to practice or jamming and finally my crybaby wich i use it in every gig and the gt-3 cant substitute this one

i wish it has a on/off switch for the expression pedal but that feature came on the gt-6 but with some tweaking i can virtually do it


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 01/03/2009 at 12:35am by jason

Ease of Use : No Opinion
sorry dude the boss gt3 has got a battery in it its like the size of a quarter
,hummm???? is anything he said true? lol
i didnt know it had one either ,and i have one, but yes its got one in there

great equipment though!

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: GBP 90 USED
Submitted 11/27/2008 at 04:05am by phil james

Ease of Use : 8
Ive heard people say that this pedal is complicated to use its hard for me to say as ive used a few boss gt pedals so when i got this pedal it was all familiar to me... i think if anyone has a small amount of expirience with multi effects will find their way around this unit no problems

Sound Quality : 9
I got this GT3 after my boss gt8 was damaged at a gig (cracked screen) i bought it cheap of a freind as a temp until my gt8 was fixed.... i must say i was blown away at how good the gt3 was its sound quality is amazing i only really use a few effects like delay and chorus and it does it perfectly with pleanty of room to edit, the overdrives in this thing are great to and cover pretty much any style... i never really used the preamp modelling in my gt8 as went straight into the amp the gt3 has a few amp models that sound great but if you want a pedal to run direct with amp modelling i dont think the gt3 is for you.. i use this gt3 with a few stomp boxs and it works pefectly with them.. all in all a very good sounding pedal that sits well with any set up

Reliability : No Opinion
built like a tank

Customer Support : 10
very very good.. boss have always had good customer support.. my power supply was damaged at a gig and they sent me a new one free of charge

Overall Rating : 10
I love this pedal and will probably use it live instead of the gt8... i love the size of this pedal as it fits in my pedal board also it only seems to have effects that are very usable (apart from auto riff) and not full of pointless gimicks like on most multi effects... this is definetly more a pedal to use with an amp rather than direct as the amp moddeling is not up there with the likes of line 6 and the gt6/8/10.... it works well with other pedals im using it with an ibanex tube screamer, boss blues drives and a vox wah all running straight into the front end of a vox ac30.. overall a pro sounding pedal that is built like a tank


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/15/2008 at 06:03pm by Jorge

Ease of Use : 8
I just wanted to correct the previous review on the site to download the user manual, the correct site is www.media.rolandus.com/manuals/GT-3_OM.pdf

good luck!!!

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: USD 50.00 USED
Submitted 09/23/2008 at 07:51pm by RLH

Ease of Use : 6
I found it very easy to use after downloading the manual... (media.rolundus.com/manuals/GT-3_OM.pdf)is where you'll find it. The sounds I got at home (for the most part) weren't usable at a gig, though. Some definite tweaking came into play.
The patches are easy to edit, once you learn how.

Sound Quality : 6
I'm using a stratocaster thru a yamaha G100-210 amp at home...and a marshall hybrid half stack with a crate 212 at gigs.
It's very noisy on any of the distortion settings.
The effects sound great at home, but, thin and harsh at the gig.
I need to learn how to tweak them some more, I guess.
As of yet, I've not been able to re-create the sounds of any of my favorite artists with the thing, but, I'd love to be able to get Stevie Ray's sound as well as Skynyrd's sound.

Reliability : 5
I just need to play with it for awhile...I'm sure it's everything I need.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I haven't dealt with the company.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I play Classic Rock, Blues & red dirt Country, I've been playing for 30 yrs.
I would buy another one if I could get it as cheap as I got this one.
I'm bound and determined to make it work for me. I've always heard great things about BOSS products, so I'll keep tweaking until I can't tweak no-more!!!


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: USD 105 USED
Submitted 08/20/2008 at 11:03am by OneUp

Ease of Use : 6
I have been playing for 7 years and been through several multi-effects including Boss ME- 50, also spent three years piecing together stomp boxes. I never could get the right sound. The GT-3 came along about a year ago and corrected that right away. To get your sound with any effect it takes time tweaking your amp, effects, and guitar to match each other perfectly. This unit does take a lot of time get to know and to find your perfect sound. Bu to get professional quality it takes that amount of time with any effect. Since it is base completely in menus instead of knobs like ME-50 it does take more time. But the possibilities are exponential comparatively. The manual is only helpful if you know nothing about the unit. Then you unless you know tech specifics it still doesn't help much. Once you get familiar the patches are somewhat easy to use.

Sound Quality : 9
Currently I am using this with the left output into P.A. and the right out into a raven RG-60 for stage sound. My Guitar is a Godin SD hot rod with Duncan vintage rails in the neck cool rails in the middle and dime bucker in the bridge. With the hot pickups the distortions are not necessary if you use middle or high gain in the preamp. The Tuner can be use as bypass and it sounds very clear. The wah effect is great. In any given bank i use one patch with an edited sound, that same sound in the next bank tweaked with a solo/ delay sound, the next patch tweaked for use with Wah Wah, and the last patch same sound with a heaver sound. I have never had luck with the Acoustic simulation. It is easier to find a good clean sound and add chorus. Or use an acoustic with anti feedback through a electric amp if it is necessary.

Reliability : 10
This thing is solid i move it anywhere from ten to fifteen time a week. It is Boss, It will last.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to use it.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I play mainly Praise and worship. But i also have played blues and country. I have been playing for seven years and in large church and venues for five. I also Have an old harmony rocket modified with Emg's that play through a York man bass amp I own several basses and acoustics. I sold all of my effects when I got this. Which included Ibanez weeping demon, tudescremer (ts-9), Rat distortion, digitech blues drive, boss Metal Zone, Super chorus, Digital delay (DD-5, and DD-6) Chromatic tuner,MXR phase 90, and Ernie ball volume pedal. I had all the good stuff but since i move around so much it was a huge hassle to set up. Know i plug in three cords and i am done


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: USD 400
Submitted 08/13/2008 at 04:19pm by Herman Nieves
Email: iggykiss<at>yahoo dot com

Ease of Use : 10
I made new sounds for the gt3 with exelent reports from friends,and other profesional musicians.I tried the gt8,and attempted similar sound modifications,but the sounds were not as rich and powerfull like my gt3.Last year i use it live in concert and everyone kept looking were my sound was coming from because they did not see any amp,because i plugged directly to the PA console,and all the musicians were very impressed by the sound from this small unit.i will not trade my machine for any other.
Sinserelly Herman Nieves

Sound Quality : 10
Excellent sound,i use it for recording straight to my recording gear.I can soun from joe satriani,ingwie malmsteen or steve vai when i want,just pushing one botton.

Reliability : 10
always,i dont have a backup gear.I stop using stomp boxes years ago after i got my gt-3.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never.

Overall Rating : 10
I play from rock,jazz,neo clasical,latin,etc.Been playing guitar for 28 years.and recording for 19.I test different boxes from diferent companies and sice i'm very picky about my sound nothing had given a more precise sound than boss pedals,and for that reason i tried the gt-3,and the result was more that i expected.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/01/2008 at 03:27pm by Fedtmulr

Ease of Use : 6
I have had this for seven years now and feel like adding an update, as many people have been pretty harsh about this unit. I do agree, however, that getting a good sound out of this requires some tweaking. I got "my" sound by first taking away everything from a patch, adding a bit of reverb and delay and then letting my amp and my Marshall Guvnor make the sound. This worked for years and when you count in the GT-3??s tuner, it was still a good deal - I would need three pedals for that basic set-up. The manual was not too helpful, but luckily a lot of good resources can be found on the Internet

Sound Quality : 10
I??m using the GT-3 with the Marshall Guvnor and an Artec Soloist Distortion in the effects loop. My main guitar is a Gibson RD Artist and my amp is a Marshall Bluesbreaker with a Marshall Power Brake. For years I was perfectly happy with my sound and I could use it for the different genres I play, but a couple of months back I joined a heavy rock band and I had to found some new sounds - specifically a distorted, compressed rhytm sound at a low volume. Imagine my delight when a GT-3 patch - 5150 Drive - provided exactly that with no tweaking at all. And I also rediscovered the JC-120 chorus sound which I now often use as my clean sound. I guess my point is: The GT-3 is a serious piece of equipment. It??s just that it is not that easy to make your own sounds with - especially not for guitarists who aren??t used to scrolling through menus

Reliability : 10
I have used it for seven years now without a back-up. It??s a Boss - `nough said

Customer Support : No Opinion
Have never had to contact Roland

Overall Rating : 10
I have been playing guitar for 32 years. As I said, I have been playing the Boss GT-3 for seven of those. Every time I have been thinking about removing it from my set-up - coz everybody knows that "real musicians don??t use multi-effects" - I have reconsidered, soz I have always used the GT-3 - and now I use it more than ever. If it was stolen I would certainly buy another one - especially since they are pretty cheap these days


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/22/2008 at 06:30pm by Rob

Ease of Use : 9
I found the GT-3 very easy to get a good sound out of and relatively easy to tweak. I don't use any of the preset patches but editing is fairly simple. I use it only for effects and midi-switching of my amp channels.

Sound Quality : 9
I use the GT-3 with various Ibanez guitars, and Peavey amps. My main amp is a Peavey JSX 120 watt head but I also use an Ultra 112 combo. I use the midi out on the GT-3 to an Axxess electronics CFX4 to change channels on both the JSX and Ultra combo. It works fantastic and gives me the quality effects that I need. Reverb, delay, and mod effects plus EQ for a solo boost etc... I run the GT-3 in the effects loop of my amps and it is very quiet and does not affect the tone negatively.

Reliability : 9
Rock solid. I just purchased a second one used but have had mine for over 10 years without any problems. I have one at our practice space and the second one coming for home use.

Customer Support : 9
Boss is rock solid. Never even had to call them.

Overall Rating : 10
The GT-3 works great and to this day I can't find anything better for near the cost you can get them used.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: USD 30 USED
Submitted 12/01/2007 at 04:27am by Nigel
Email: Nigel at blacktie<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
I really need to find a manual (I bought it off a friend) But, Using the presets, It's really easy, and it sounds great. It's great for playing live because you can switch from tone to tone very easily.

Sound Quality : 9
I would say it's okay. Personally, I think I've gotten better tones out of individual effects pedals, But, For having so many tones at access with such ease, There really is nothing to compare it to. I'm running it through my Line 6 Spider III, If you own one of these, Leave the channel on Clean (I add a touch of reverb too) Or else it will sound like utter crap.

Reliability : 9
I've only had it for a week or so, But, I would say it's pretty reliable, I'm not in a position to really judge it on a life or death matter, because most of my songs are played on a slightly distorted channel to begin with (That I can achive with my amp) I really just use it for the cool effects (Flock of Seagulls type effects)

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
I play Down-Tempo Industrial, and this thing really gets the job done, since 90% of my show is improvised B.S., This thing helps really make it something worth while, I really can't say anything bad about it, except that on some settings it doesn't sound very sharp (Noticebly so) But that's perfect if you're looking for a little bit of dirt. Also, Some of the tones on there are just stupid (Like Casio tones) Telephones, Helicopters, so on and so fourth. I don't personally use them, But if that floats your boat, then by all means, go for it. If you can find one for under $175, I'd say go for it without thinking twice. Don't pay more than $250-$300 for it though, Not that it wasn't worth it at one time, But you can find it for alot cheaper. I bought mine off a co-worker who just needed extra money and really didn't want the thing for $30. He bought it used for $150, From a guy who bought it new at $200, if that gives you any idea.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/26/2007 at 12:14am by Greg

Ease of Use : 7
Its not that easy to use but, once you play around with it you'll get the idea. Editing the patches requires knowledge of the programming behind their make up.
The manual is very technical, it takes some logic to understand. no firmware included in this. Its a straight up stand alone unit

Sound Quality : 8
I can definantly achieve the sound of my favorite artists. They include mostly metal performers such Van halen, metallica, As I lay dying, Godsmack, lamb of God but, I can also get Hendrix and clapton on this as well. This unit will give you the sound but, its up to you and your fingers to play it.
I play through a fender front man and it sounds great despite playing through a small practice amp. A lot of people complain that it sounds cold, sterile, and digital however, it sounds that way because those people have no clue on how to properly configure it.
Here is a key tip for you all. On the output setting, use the LIne out headphone setting if your playing through any amp smaller then a Combo or stack (in other words if your playing through a practice amp). If you do set it to combo or stack output setting while playing through a practice amp, set the amp's treble and bass EQ to 1 and playing around with the MID. If you leave all the amps EQ's in the middle at 5 it's going to sound trebly. IT will sound that way since the Stack and Combo setting is meant to be played through 30" speakers which have the boom that even out the treble. Does this make sense now? Once modifying your amps eq's to the way I mentioned before, your unit will have the smoothness and warmth you want. Again, boss produces pro studio quality equipment. This is not a toy like the line 6 POD's. The GT-3 requires precise settings to get your sound and Unlike the line 6 stuff the boss GT-3 has the right balance of depth and volume. I owned the POD xt and although the sound seemed dead on to what I wanted, it lacked a convincing volume presence that can project your sound forward.. Digitech is a joke and bigger toy then line 6. The sound is thick digital and amateur.
I'm giving the Gt-3 an 8 because the GT-6 gets a 10 for having broader features.

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9
I play metal, rock, classic rock. The GT=3 small and can produce any sound you want, heck of a good match for me.
Been playing for 8 years, own a bunch of ESP EC guitars and an epiphone gothic all of which sound great through this. As mentioned before boss really blows away line 6, digitech or korg.
Only thing I wish it had was step activation wah but, programming the control button to activate the wah during a patch can compensate for that. In fact it motivates me to use the wah even more.
Definantly inspires me to play music. The sound projects and cuts through the mix. this is a great unit. I'm never abandoning boss ever again. Took Boss for granted before because I had an untrained ear but, I'm a much better player now and can hear the difference boss makes against their competitors


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/22/2007 at 07:31pm by Winston Psmith

Ease of Use : 7
This is an update, of sorts: I reviewed the GT-3 a long time ago, and I was surprised to see that people were stil interested in the old box, so I thought I'd stick my nose in again.

If you're used to multi-effects, the GT-3 is pretty straightforward; if you're used to pedals, it's kind of weird. Most effects have more parameters than pedals have knobs; the Phaser has 8 parameters, but an old Phase 90 has one knob. The Guitar Synth menu will mean nothing to anyone who hasn't played or programmed a synth, and then there are submenus you access with the Utility button. It's deep. BTW, I recently progammed a GT-8 for a friend; the knobs don't help all that much, they get you some quick control, but bypass a lot of parameters.

Editing can be tough; again, it's digital multi-effects processor depth vs. pedal simplicity. You'll want the manual; it's helpful, but not comprehensive. Boss/Roland manuals have gotten better over time, but this sentence is classic Boss/Roland, from page 43, describing the Fuzz effect: "This produces a basic fuzz sound with." I found the same line in the manual for the GT-5, and the GT-8! There's an Unofficial GT-3 manual out there, along with a bunch of user sites. You'll find a lot of help quickly, with any search on "GT-3".

Experienced users have been giving the GT-3 9's and 10's, while less-experienced users have rated it 4 or 5. I'll give it a 7, depending on your experience.

Sound Quality : No Opinion
I'm not going to review ALL the effects, I really just wanted to address some problems people have described.

First, forget the presets. Make a BLANK patch for yourself, and copy it as many times as you can stand pushing the same buttons over and over. It's a pain at first, but it saves you wondering if you're about to overwrite a good patch. You can always copy a few prestets from the factory bank.

Second, dig in to the Utility menu; this is where you can select your output (Line, Guitar Combo, etc.), check all your levels, do your MIDI setup, and program new riffs for the Auto-Riff and custom scales for the Harmonist. Selcting the right Output is crucial to your sound; for example, if your have "Line" selected as your Output setting, the Speaker emulator is always on! If you're having tone problems, most of the solutions are probably in the Utility menu.

Third, it's very easy to over-EQ your sound with the GT-3. The compressor has a Tone parameter, there's an EQ effect, and a Sub-EQ in the Modulation bank, the Dist/OD effects have Bass/Treble, the Pre-Amp has Bass, Middle, Treble, Presence and Bright controls, the Delay & Chorus both have High Cut, and Reverb has both Low- & High Cut. If you tweaked ALL of those EQ's it's like chopping your tone into bunches of little frequency bands that you cut or boost. Roll back the EQ's as much as possible when crafting your tones, especially if you're running into a guitar amp, after the GT-3. Less is more, inthis case, less EQ, more tone.

Fourth, the GT-3 sounds best into a really clean guitar amp, like a JC-120, or a Keyboard/PA rig. Maybe a Polytone.

The distortion can be tweaked into some usable sounds, but if you have a favorite dist/OD pedal that's crucial to your sound, patch it in through the Ext OD loop. Don't make yourself crazy over it.

If you have an amp that's the heart of your sound, why would you use the GT-3's Pre-Amp effect, anyway, unless you use it as a sort of pre-amp/overdrive. Use the effects you need, and forget the ones you don't.

I tend to stick with the JC-120 & Clean Twin models for most things. I use all of the effects except the Sub-EQ, and maybe the Humanizer. The Harmonist effect isn't as lame as the Harmonist pedal, but if you need a serious Harmonizer/Pitch-Shifter, this isn't it. The 2X2 Chorus is much cooler-sounding than the regular Chorus. Live, I run my GT-3 into a JC-90 or a house PA. There are so many sound options in the GT-3, it's hard to rate; dig deep, and you might get 9 or 10 quality sounds; stick with the factory sounds, and you're down around 5 or 6.

Reliability : 10
Had mine long enough that I've forgotten exactly when I got it. I've used it for years, without a backup, but I might get another now that they're so cheap.

Customer Support : 8
The Roland reps who come around and do in-store demos are knowledgable, and helpful. On the phone, you might get anybody; they'll try to help, sometimes you just can't get there.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
The GT-3 is a pretty deep box, for about the price of a Metal Zone, maybe less. If you're willing to spend time programming it, you can probably get most of the sounds you want, or pretty close. Some players will be better off with one good Dist/OD, maybe a Delay pedal, and a killer amp. I've been playing for a long time, have used tons of effects, and I'm pretty satisfied with the GT-3. I've been a Boss user for a long time, and it's cool to have most of the classic Boss boxes all in one box, even if some of them have mutated. If you love knobs, don't be fooled by the GT-8. It's a very different box, and the knobs don't tell the whole story.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/07/2007 at 07:02pm by Tom Buck

Ease of Use : 5
Takes a short time to learn how this unit programs, the manual is some help, after a few edits you see that it isn't all that difficult.

Sound Quality : 8
A great all in one unit that I've used for 8 years, I even returned a GT-6 to hang on to the GT-3. It will react differently with any amp, I use it will a Line 6 2-12 or a Line 6 1-12, set for clean. 57 re-issue Strat with Duncans is the guitar of choice. You'll experience some noise with some of the high gain type setting, OD, Dist, and the out of the box pre-sets are ok but you'll want to edit those.

Reliability : 10
I do own 2 of these and have never had to use the backup....yet

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
It's great if you play a lot of different styles, clean, OD, Compressed Straty tone. I gig 5 nights a week and have been for many years, a great all in one unit


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: USD 455.00
Submitted 03/31/2007 at 07:38am by hell

Ease of Use : No Opinion
I spent a lot of time modifying parameters here and came up with nothing close to what sounds like what they say it represents.

Sound Quality : 2
I can get that sound that makes me feel bad or sad depending on what bank I choose from. It dont matter which number im on its really weird uhmmm 1-4 to 50-3 just pick any assignment and modify till your enjoying the process of tweaking and forgot about guitar, its really funny. marshall fender cabs guitars chords you know the style i used this stuff in conjunction with gt-3.

The chorus sounded good at instances but it was facsimile of a good chorus pedal. Boss makes descent chorus and delay pedals so I wondered if gt-3 cosm could nail the representations of them accurately?

These dayz I just put on one of the infinite looping fx banks and it puts a smile on my face, interesting sorta like hiphop being heard from the neighbours place down the street or like putting a video cartridge in a game console and hearing the opening track repeat. Its all the same.

Gt-3 makes me feel like guitar was a bad choice I should quit while their still is time but still I insist their is hope in this unit even I failed the moment I got sucked into its purchase. Complete doom.
Entertaining the pleasures of what gt-3 is capable of.

You can get every sound possible except the one your looking for that resonates well with your rig. You really must have boutique ears to give it anything close to a 10.

Im just so happy boss crammed every pedal model they could in gt-3 so I could gock at the digital screen and think to myself in comfort that I have access to all their effects! I feel jaded and want to seduce myself to escape the harsh reality of bad tone.

Reliability : 1
This gear made me read the celestine prophecy just so I could remember the section on co-dependancy because i felt alone and forgot everything about having great solid tone was.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 1
Uninspiring gt-3 beat me.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/31/2007 at 06:09am by nicole_gibson

Ease of Use : 8
At first glance its a multi fx board ... so expect to brain pick at this unit for longer than a minute till it makes sense to you. I got this GT-3 without a manual. If your a tweak nut your constantly going to use using the parameter push buttons and jog wheel buttons etc just to get to what your trying to adjust. Its to be expected since its digital apparatus.

Sound Quality : 5
Ok first i have a 100 watt marshall from the 1970s with four inputs. Its into a 4x12 cab. Im using my fav guitar a fender tele deluxe.

Im going from the mono(left) output on gt-3 into the front input of the marshall(no fx loop here). Suddenly I noticed a whole new world of sound thats wet and colorful but not necessarily good to my ears.

Boss(roland) has always given out a generous amount of fx with any of their fx products. Most units they make are solid and good.

With the gt-3 your great tube amp you own might just might lose all of its rich and organic signal. You might try the fx loop on your boogie soldano orange or whatever but you better shut off everything like gt-3's preamps, overdrives and eq and let your amp do its thing and use the gt-3 just for the reverbs, chorus and delays and modulation fx otherwise your tone might suck.

See what I mean??? you might be better off getting stand alone pedals that will enhance your sound. Think fulltone, roger mayer fx, foxrox pedals, mxr, boss, dunlop or any boutiqueness... take like 3 and chain em up old skool and Im sure you'll agree it still sounds better than this digital representation of the real deal.

Gt-3 is noisey and the noise suppressor really wants to kick in so the natural decay of tone is now suffering to. Ok lets shut off the suppressor right?. Lets fiddle with the eg, preamps, and overdrives we could modify the parameters or turn off stuff we dont need so much of and adjust the db of the eq etc etc. Still wtf am I doing wasting my time! Tone became weak anyhow and i lost most all of the marshalls original great signal. Its as if im listening to my amp with a layer of glass over top and its raining on it as well LOL!!! Total abuction!

Boss fx have always made great individual pedals ive owned most and since the ce-2 came out in the day! The gt-3 is unit is ok from an illusion of what fx can be but not quite the same animal though. Thats what im saying. If i was a guitar noob and didnt understand tone i would be in heaven with this.

Im giving a 6 just because I would feel bad for giving roland boss a lower score cause I like their pedals and hope they investigate digital artifacts and read harmony reviews.

Reliability : 7
You could depend on it its made tough enough but i would never bring it out in public cause i wouldnt be proud of it being associated with my sound. Pretty convenient eh? to have everything in one mfx to do the job. That is reliability within itself.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I was happy more than anything bringing this to a friend who could appreciate this for what it was. We tried it on his fender amp and same thing i was convinced it wasn't my fx board and quickly put it in the past very fast! He liked it and was sold on it which tells me many things. Its not a very musical sounding piece of equipment IMHO.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: GBP 80.00 USED
Submitted 03/18/2007 at 04:46pm by John

Ease of Use : 9

Sound Quality : 9
I use this for chorus, reverbs ect and i use my treble booster in send and return for my rock sounds, This is a great sounding pedal i use my gt3 through my brian may deaky amp.

Reliability : 10

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/05/2007 at 11:44am by atomicsitup

Ease of Use : 6
It's a little difficult to find what you are looking for. But then, most players have no idea what sound they really want. After you figure out how to dial up the effect you're seeking, it really can be an very functional pedal.

Sound Quality : 8
I guess this depends. I play a mixture of Southern Rock, Jazz, Blues and Funk. It's not that hard to come up with something on this pedal to fit those descriptions. Since there are many different types of preamps and distortions, it's hard to find a good clear consistent sound that doesn't feeback too often. I run this through a Marshall 1959 SLP and a JC-120 as a stereo output. I get good tone but it did take awhile to fine tune the settings. The only issue I have with the pedal is that on some patches, when you switch the control pedal to add or subract an effect within a patch, sometimes it decreases the sound momentarily like it can't figure out what to do for a second. All in all though, if you want any effect to mess around with, this has it.

Reliability : 8
Very dependable because it's Boss. I've been using it for about six years. A backup is a good idea but I haven't needed one yet.

Customer Support : 8
Never dealt with the company as I have not needed to. This thing does not break easily.

Overall Rating : 8
Since I stick to more rock and jazz tones, I tend to want warmer sounds. To make my overdrive sound more consistent I have gone to a Fulltone Fulldrive 2 so that I can depend on the sound better. I may upgrade to a few new pedals and use them in conjunction with the GT-3. I am a control freak and it's hard to be consistent with this processor if you like a lot of different tones.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/13/2006 at 04:47pm by Sam

Ease of Use : 8
This unit takes some time to really get to grips with, although te interface is logical enough. If you like tweaking, this is a good'un!
Advise: get the manual. Its fairly easy to get started with the G3, but its a good thing to have the manual to 'go deeper'into the unit.

Sound Quality : 8

With time, patience, and knowledge of sound and what you want spent on it this unit DOES deliver. Modulation effects are easy, typical Boss strongholds, but the overdrives available are more tricky. Use these together with the EQ and the Pre- amp options, and remember that less is more. Also, set your relative volume levels correctly, balances those patches/ sounds right.
This gets used with a 1979 Gibson The Paul and a Squier Tele, into a vintage Roland Bolt 30 Hybrid ad an Epiphone valve junior head. Results are very good, but it takes some effort! Worth it though.

Reliability : 9
Bulletproof. Very solid steel chassis, good old Boss switches. Excellent.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No idea.

Overall Rating : 9
I like playing classic rock, everything from Led Zeppelin to britrock. Like the sound of valves being given a good thrashing. But: like a bit of Pink Floyd/ stonerrock too, so decent effect are what I need as well. The GT3 has those, it was relatively cheap at the time and I have no regrets buying it. Delivers all I need. Does whacky stuff as well ( synth, etc) but thats just very gimmicky. Stick to what this unit is good at , and that's providing rock solid reliability, good sounds, plenty of options and a lot of hours well spent! Not for the starting musician this one, but a good choice. They go for not much money these days.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: USD 75 USED
Submitted 10/17/2006 at 05:32pm by Aaron

Ease of Use : 6
This pedal is for someone who is willing to tweak. First of all ignore all of the pre-sets.

It's easy to get at all the settings and change, but extremely difficult to get the tone I want. I like this better than the GT-6 or GT-8 because there are less knobs to break off and or accidently bump while playing. It's head and shoulders above any digitech multi-effects I've played around with.

Sound Quality : 10
It's hard to get exactly what you want. This is especially for distortion. The natural, Turbo, and blues settings are way to clean whereas the Metal, Dist, Crunch, Grunge settings are way too muddy. The key is to add the right levels of compression (sustain and attack) and a good pre-amp. Make a setting for each guitar/amp set-up you want to play out of. Once you've found it, though it's just amazing.

Reliability : 10
Bought it used, haul it around at least once a weeek, and have dropped it many times. The thing is as solid as a rock.

Customer Support : No Opinion
?

Overall Rating : 10
I play mostly punk with distortion, delay, compression, reverb, and clean. Guitars: 1960 LP Gibson and an American Std Tele. Amps: Vox AD100VT (tube hybrid) and Fender Princeton Chorus (solid state). This is all I need and I love it! I bought mine for $75 and it's worth every penny. Since then I've tried both the GT-6 and GT-8, I won't be upgrading anytime soon. The next thing I want to try: TUBE AMP.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/12/2006 at 10:42pm by criag

Ease of Use : 5
was not that easy to use

Sound Quality : 5
this peddle was very noisey and the distortions where horrible they all sounded fuzzy i took it back to guitar center for digitech rp 250 newest peddle sounded alot quieter and sounds sounded better

Reliability : 10
I bought is used at guitar center and had it 2 days took it back but i know it was in perfect condition used and worked like it was supposed to

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 6


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: GBP 270
Submitted 07/20/2006 at 08:35pm by Steve
Email: steveohdearyme<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : 9
Insanely easy to use! It operates on a push button > options kinda procedure then you basically just tweak til you get your sound. Tonnes of options but presented in a fool-proof way. Editing is a piece of wee really, ive edited patches during songs and without a hitch, one thing i loved about that particular option was the subtleness in which this can be acheived. Basically, strum...add delay, chorus and some phase and theres not even a hint of an obvious change.

Sound Quality : 8
For clean effected tones (i love my effects) this unit is close to perfect, i have patches where ive mixed up to 6 different fx and the sound quality is awesome. I must admit that for heavier distortion it can be a little disappointing. I find it quite difficult to achieve a full on phat distorted sound even with all the pre-amp and gain options, still the overdrive is great. Can't say enough for the other fx though, such a massive range in effect sounds!!

Reliability : 8
Well ive had a pint spilled on mine, plus its been dropped by some idiot from a great height and yet it still works. Most effect users know that Boss have superior reliability with their products. Watch out for the adaptor though, ive had my unit for 5 years and went through 4 adaptors.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to contact Boss actually....so i can't really comment.

Overall Rating : 10
Like i say ive had my GT-3 for 5 years and its never let me down. I can switch from a clean tone with lots of effects to a dirty sound with a little reverb all in the tap of a foot. Ive made up some cool patches on this thing, i recommend this unit to any guitarist who likes to mess around. It has everything plus some additional effects that you may or may not use. I should add that ive used a GT-5 and a GT-6 now and neither have come close to this (although this is obviously just my opinion). Theyre quite cheap these days so if you like sounds id say buy this in a hurry. Well played Boss!


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/16/2006 at 11:08am by Randy

Ease of Use : 8
Easy to understand, very adjustable. I just wish there was an interface for it that didn't take so much effort. Somebody made a midi interface that works in Windows, but I am Mac-based, so I haven't seen whether it works or not.

Sound Quality : 10
This was given to me as a gift. I was originally a skeptic, so when I got it I thought it would be an interesting toy for over-the-top sounds. Trouble is, I never really use over-the-top sounds. In fact, I like to get my distortions by driving the amp or by using messed up speaker cabinets. This doesn't work well for shows or for practice, and since we started doing shows, I had to find a way to get the sounds consistantly.
I pulled out the GT-3 and started tweaking. After a while I realized all I needed to do was set the volume on my Bassman head to about 8 and vary the input volume, and then add a couple of messed up distortions into the mix. Two of the pedal switches are simply high and low volume. The high volume sounds no different than plugging straight into the amp. I would have never thought this possible. If you keep the cords short, there is no discernable difference in noise level. The lower volume is just like turning the guitar down with its volume knob. The distortions match any of the pedals I have used in the past, I can approximate the Big Muff sound, the DS-1 sound, the Tube Screamer sound, the Distortion+ sound, etc.
The touch sensitivity and feedback that you can get plugging direct into the amp is the same. I keep scouring the web to see if someone who knows better than me feels differently. I can't believe a digital effects pedal can feel so real.
I have used it for recording guitar parts late at night when I didn't want to wake anyone up. If I don't take notes, I forget whether I mic'd a cabinet or went direct with the GT-3. Also, the effects are great for messing up tracks when mixing. If you put the signal through a impedance matching box (like a Reamp) the resulting signal is as clean or as dirty as you would like it. The Arpeggiator on a vocal part is really funny.
One note of caution- at least for me, all the presets are useless. I cannot imagine using a single one of them. I can't believe the pedal actually sold when the first thing folks would hear when plugging into it was one of these over-compressed, noise gated monstrosities.


Reliability : 10
Built like a Sherman Tank. I have been gigging with it for about 5 years and it doesn't even show it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
N/A

Overall Rating : 10
I play punk rock and country-ish punk. I have been playing for 27 years. I use a Bassman head (AB165) with a 2-12 cabinet with Jensens or an Ampeg V-3 cabinet. I also have a Gibson GA6 Tweed Lancer, a Bassman 10, and a Fender BXR 300. Guitars- Epiphone G400 SG with Gibson humbuckers from an Epiphone Genesis, '84 Telecaster, '98 Strat, Hohner Les Paul copy (heavily moded) and a Peavey Fury bass.
If somehow my GT-3 was missing, I would buy a new one asap. It doesn't get in the way, and does what I need it to without fail. I haven't had any trouble with it in 5 years and cannot say that about any of the stompboxes I have used in the past.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $75 used
Submitted 01/22/2006 at 07:07am by kenny

Ease of Use : 10
this is pretty easy to use... you have to be stupid not to know what ur doing with it after like an hour of messin with it...

Sound Quality : 10
im using this with an ibanez rg220b and a peavy shitty combo amp but it sounds good... it the harmonizer thingy you can do alot with and alot of the other effects are great too... some of the distortions are week and just get in the way when you try n figure this thing out but its not a big problem if you play soft stuff..

Reliability : 10
idk if i would use this in a gig rite now but in the future when ive figured everything out about it..

Customer Support : No Opinion
no i havent haD to

Overall Rating : 10
i play alota metal and grungy stuff but mostly i make up my own stuff...
ive been playing for like 3 years, so if it were stolen or lost idk if id be able to buy it again for this price cuz i just sorta came across it at a pawn shop.. id deffinatley use this pedal for recording.. you can get whatever you desire out of it.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: $300 (CAD) used
Submitted 01/04/2006 at 10:14am by -GuitarPro

Ease of Use : 10
Itwas difficult at first, but after explorere for hours, it's a peie of cake, i know how to use this easily

Sound Quality : 10
I have a Jay Turser Vintage Series, it's a crap guitar, but with this, it sounds great. I also have a crap amp, but now I use my Gt-3 as an amp and my actual amp as the speakers.

Reliability : 10
The GT-3 helps me with all my gigs, gives me Wah, Distortion, Clean, CHorus, and everything I need in one. Sadly, I don't have a backup, but it's so dependable I know it won't break down.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never used it, it never broke down on me

Overall Rating : 10
I play Punk, Metal, Jazz and Rock. It helps me with all the sounds I want and my band even wants to buy one, but it's out of production. I'm sure the GT-6 and GT-8 is even better, so I recommend this product.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $200 used
Submitted 12/23/2005 at 12:23pm by Santrago
Email: s_suinaga at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
At first it's difficult because it has many effects and many buttons, but if you take a quick read over the manual, it becomes very easy to use. The problem is that many of the people do not read the manuals and expect to learn how to use it magically. Have a quick read over the manual and you can create almost any sound possible.

Sound Quality : 10
I'm using an Aria Pro II ZZ (Explorer) Deluxe, the same makers for Cliff Burton basses. My amp is a Yamaha T100C designed by Soldano with vacuum tubes. With this amp the GT-3 sound great. I'ts very important to adjust the settings and utility to your personal amp, beacuse this will make the difference in the sound. People that said they don't like the sound i'ts because they didn't adjust the settings and utility according to their amps.

There are too many effects I don't use. My favorites for clean is the JC-120 with the harmonizer, 5150 Trash sounds very like Metallica and Pantera, for solos I use the BG lead that sound like sweet child o'mine slash solos and intro. The Metal solo effect i use with the wah that creates a very Kirk Hammet sound. Also i like the phaser ande delays. I like so much the Satraini effect named Satch tone.

I want to remark that I change a little bit the factory settings for these effects, to make them more accurate to the real ones.

If you change some patterns and settings in the effects you can approach to the effects you want for sure, try making variations and you will get it.




Reliability : 10
I have it like 3 years ago and the other user had it for two years and it is in perfect conditions, without any problem.

Good materials

Customer Support : 8
I, have no contact BOSS because I never need it, it works perfectly and easy to use with the manual.

Overall Rating : 10
I play Metallica, Joe Satriani, Steve Vai, Guns'n roses and some of my own creations that comes from metal, rock, blues and some jazz.

I have been playing for 6 years, I had a Rat distortion pedal but i sold it when i bouth teh GT-3, also i had a Metal Zone that gives you a very good distortion, sometimes better than the Gt-3, but you can have an approach by modifying some settings, a good approach its the 5150 Trash.

I feel very comfortable with my Gt-3, a good bought


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/21/2005 at 01:54am by Seiji

Ease of Use : 4
Not the easiest to use. I used a digitech RP200 for quite some time because i didnt want to figure out the GT-3. My own laziness though. If youre not a total luddite, and you spend about 10 minutes with it, you can figure out how it works. press buttons, press more buttons, press more buttons, etc. The preset sounds are alright, sound have are cranked up with a lot of gain, so i turn down the output on my guitar to get a better tone.

Sound Quality : 8
I use this thing as my outboard compressor for my home studio because im too poor to buy a real one. BUT, this works fine, i keep it on an FX insert in between my preamp and AD converters and it compresses everything fine.
I think most of the sound effects tends to be pretty digital sounding, especially the high gain ones, but that only matters for tone-freaks. If your playing with a band no one will notice or care. I use it for recording, through tube amp, thru practice amps, through a half stack, all color it obviously, but it sounds fine for anything you would want. The Wahs are kind of boring even though it has five of them.
For me, the compressors, EQ, gate (called something else in here), limiter are pretty useful and make this MORE than a guitar FX pedal, its just an audio processing board really.

Reliability : 10
Seems good. I havent broken anything on it yet. Its heavy if that counts. Nice pedals. They havent changed the pedal design and now theyre on GT-8, so there must not have been too many complaints...
The power cord is sweet because it is NOT a wall wart. I would depend on this sucker playing live.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never

Overall Rating : 8
I play a wide variety, jazz, blues, rock, space rock, metal, electronica. I can generally get sounds of of this that i want for the guitar parts, AND bass, AND vocals. I use more audio plugins than anything though.
If it were stolen or lost i would buy the new version, not this. But if you find one used, for a good deal, snatch it up.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: 250.00 (# sterling.) used
Submitted 11/28/2005 at 07:38am by RP

Ease of Use : 8
I've had this box of tricks for about five years now and still manage to find something new every time I go a-tweakin'. It's easy to get a sound from the presets and fairly easy to write your own programmes using the manual for guidance but trial and error is your best option The trick is in knowing how each effect works and how it affects the overall tone and this takes time friend. But that said it's best to start off by tweaking and saving one of the presets until you've become familiarised with the workings.
The only problem I get is in a live situation when I need to tweak "on the fly", the layout means that I have to open up the programme to adjust and then save.

Sound Quality : 9
I've tried this with various set ups but find the best way to get the full stereo effect out of it is directly into a power amp and a pair of (currently Marshall) cabs with a bit of ditance between them. The pre amps can be a bit harsh on times and the distortions a bit fizzy so I found that you need to work out which OD/Distortion type suits which Preamp type. That said it would probably take a valve officionado to know that it is SS in a live situation.
The reverbs, delays and modulation fx are superb but it's best to get a good basic sound first and then add these for "colour".
The band cut a demo recently and I went straight into the desk via the GT3 in stereo - the engineer was amazed at the sounds coming through the monitors and we were more than happy with the results.

Reliability : 10
I bought this as "used" about five years ago. It was in pretty good condition then and still is. I've had absolutely no problems with it whatsoever apart from one of the rubber feet coming away but that can be easily remedied. It's been stomped on at least three nights a week and still does the job with no signs of packing up. And no, I don't carry a back up.

Customer Support : 10
I haven't had cause to contact them in the five years that I've owned the unit but having contacted them about a different matter sometime ago I found the CS dept very helpful.

Overall Rating : 8
I've been playing for about 30 years (it's about time I stopped for tea) and play various styles from roots to rock both in a band and solo. I use a Lonestar Strat, Eggle Berlin and Takamine electro through it. it compliments them all.
If it were lost or stolen I'd either try to replace it or money permitting upgrade to the gt6 or 8 purely for the ability to adjust on stage.
I don't think there's much to dislike about it apart from the weird Synth and modulator FX. The harmoniser is great fun for the Queen and Lizzy fans.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $424.00
Submitted 10/28/2005 at 08:06am by Scott L (SL-1)

Ease of Use : 3
for the experienced (me and other good players)this is a piece of cake...we gain structure our equipment so it sounds as intended, and we know our way around the parameters. When I read some of these reveiws I laugh..I first owned one of these in 1999 when it came out and I too at the time was a bit frustrated because I was an intermediate guitar effects wizard..I always ran my effects to this day thru the same peavey half stack but I went thru a rack journeey and this how the story goes:
After my gt-3 I sold it in 2001 and bought a rocktron voodoo valve and it was pretty good but not an elite like a gt. So I sold that and bought a mesa :tri-axis and it was quite good but way too expensive and over priced and didnt quite hit the mark, so I sold it in 2003 , with it came alot of money and in 2004 bought a peavey tube-fex.which I liked better than the over priced tri-axis, but I sold it cuz it too was missing some thing..so In 2005 I needed the gt-3 back because one of my friends showed up to rehearsal and my jaw dropped!..the piece of gear I so longed to have back was there but it was his!..kinda like a girlfriend that was yours and he didnt know and introduces you to her to find out she was an -ex..same thing..My point? this IS the real deal...take some time my friend and learn this hard to master unit..for the effects are accurate ,deep and when set up PROPERLY and dead accurate

Sound Quality : 10
my story will answer alot of this...tweak it over time and you will find your tone..Im buying another one..Ive learned a painful lesson.I was a jerk and want her back.I play a custom Jackson soloist (my signature model s-1 )with duncan jb in the bridge.the metal zone pedal my cousin todd and I used in our A-B comparison proved the accuracy of this same settings and the same cabinet = same sound. every effect on this unit is crystal clear and when set up at unity gain (the same level in as it goes out)you will experience heaven..this has an input meter..use it! run it at 3/4 the way up and listen for analog distortion...My 5150 distortion in this unit was great and will use it again...for you metal heads try the sldn lead (soldano) and it is very scorpions "crazy world) tone...very 2khz punchy...speaker simulator is great exept hard to get the deep cabinet sound but I really dont like that anyway...I get a great sound direct in (mixer meter at 0!)dont have to push the levels and use all headroom saveit! use it with my peavey half stack...noise suppressor I took for granted...never thought about it until I pushed it and heard all this nasty noise...It is awesome.all effects are pristine quality...and the metal distortion 2 sounds as we proved EXACTLY like the metal zone

Reliability : 10
reliable? like a hunting dog! or a tv...everytime your fired up-its ready to go and expect no problems

Customer Support : 1
no comment (LOL) I am loyal once again to boss/roland so I wont go there... dont like to depened on them...nice but clueless

Overall Rating : 10
I bought my first one new, and my second one used... play metal and this thing delivers in spades..been playing since the 70's and this is still the best preamp I have ever used...if it were stolen and I caught the dude? I would go medeival and take my sword and ...well..(deep breath, going to my happy place)good for him I guess...karma's a bitch. I sold this once and want it back!I need this unit,love everything about her, better than my ex's: rocktron, mesa,peavey,(love peavey's though)engl,and hughes and kettner.It has all I need and love her for it...I hope you experience the awesome playing time I had with it...and thank my band mate for bringing us back together...


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $208 used
Submitted 10/21/2005 at 02:23pm by Jack Aikens
Email: wicc_ed_stuff at yahoo<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
With a little tinkering around without the manual you can basically figure out how to get a pretty good sound, once you have this undercontrol the manual makes a pretty good reference for getting what you are looking for. The presets are however a joke and I would recommend starting from scratch and basically just set it all up the way you would your normal pedal board or what you would need from particular songs.

Sound Quality : 10
I'm using this piece of equipment with a 1986 Japanese Strat hotrodded with a Dimarzio Evolution at the bridge and an Ibanez 320 DX running directly into the effects loop of a Randall Classic 150 2x12 combo which also runs to an additional Jackson 2x12 speaker cab. The effects sound awesome, kicks the shit out of everything I've ever used, excluding the Digitech GSP-21 rack unit I used a few years back, the GT-3 is much faster at switching between effects, the old digitech wouldn't switch without a black out time between channels. Great for capturing high gain tones similar to Zakk Wylde Dimebag Darrell, as well as really smooth and spaced out tones similar to Vai and Satriani. Old school metal zone era sounds are no prob either, anything from Mercyful Fate to Judas Priest and Maiden are easily captured as well.

Reliability : 10
Very reliable and tough, I use it all the time with absolutely no backup on stage as well as the studio.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to deal with it.

Overall Rating : 10
I play a lot of different styles of music, whether it is a form of Rock or Metal, or Jazz this unit is perfect. I chose it because of the high recommendations of other musicians I've known for years who have used one. Before this I had used a Zoom Player 2100 for a few years and this unit ate that one alive, shit it back out, then ate it again.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 10/11/2005 at 06:19pm by Brian Bowersox

Ease of Use : 8
It's pretty easy to use and figure out. I figured it out in a few minutes without the manual. All the buttons make sense. It's reall easy to edit patches too.

Sound Quality : 4
I play through a SG with seymour duncans, (59 in the the neck and Custom in the bridge) An Epiphone sheraton and a mexican fender strat into a crybaby, original small stone phasor, Digitech whammy, TS-9 Tubescreamer boss ds-1, big muff, boss bf-2, small clone chorus then into a mesa boogie single rectifier with a boss dd-3 and Holy Grail reverb in the effects loop. My cabinet is a Avatar 4x12. This unit is very quite. The noise gate works well. I honestly didn't care for any of the effects and I have boss stomp boxes. This doesn't sound anywhere near as good as them. I excited about trying this out and really disappointed after having it in my home and playing on it for awhile. The synth sounds got me excited but the processor is just too slow to keep up with how fast I'm playing lead stuff. Maybe the new GT-8 can. The pitch shifter seemed to have tracking problems too. With my digitech whammy pedal I can play a chord and get a hairy but still cool sounding chord but this thing just starts jumping all over the place. I thought all of the distortions sounded really weak and fizzy and the amp models sounded the same exact for the fender twin clean sound. It was nice. The vintage phaser actually did sound pretty close to my small stone though. Honestly I think the whole processor is just too slow. I play a lot of shredding stuff and it just seemed to slow everything down and then when I plugged straight into my amp it was smooth sailing again. It is old technology though compared to all the new stuff out now. I personally was disgusted with it as a pedal sound-wise.

Reliability : 9
This is always a great thing about Boss. They build stuff tough!

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 5
It wasn't good for me at all as a guitarist. I play everything but country. I've been playing for 8 years and went to college as a music major with guitar as my instrument, specifically classical. It's durability and ease of use are the only good things I have to say about it.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: 995 (AUS$ in 1996-97)
Submitted 08/23/2005 at 04:15am by Rob Rhodes

Ease of Use : 9
This is one of the easiest multi effects pedals ever. If you ever see one on ebay, you should buy it!

Sound Quality : 8
2xMusicman Axis sport + Marshall TSL60, OC3 & 535Q Crybaby. I don't use the amp modelling so noise is not an issue. All effects are great depending on what your expectations are. I drive it straight into the front of my JCM2000. I have always worked at getting my own sound. I use the blues driver in the overdrive/distortion section to really drive the clean channel of the Marshall. Delays are clean and the Synth if tweaked just right, can replace that whiney keyboard player.

Reliability : 10
I have had it for about 8 years of so and it has never failed.

Customer Support : 10
Roland are always good, but i've never needed them with this.

Overall Rating : 10
I play rock/pop/funk and blues and have been doing so for 15 years. I am finally at a point where I am completely happy with my gear. This is a rare thing. If it was lost or stolen I would probably look at upgrading to a GT8 or PODXT Live. I love the versatilty of this unit. I midi switch my head with it, do whammy fx etc. But most of all it always does the job I ask of it.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $340.00
Submitted 08/05/2005 at 05:55pm by toneman 30

Ease of Use : 9
once you get the hang of the user interface it is easy to use,the manual is not that great but not totaley bad,overall i like the gt-3 ease of use.

Sound Quality : 9
in my opinion as so many said the cosm distortion models are not that good,thay are hard edged fuzzy and cold,forget about using these for direct recording,i have many different effects and processors i ran this unit through for studio and direct recording and cannot get a good tone,you can get a fairly good distortion through the right guitar amp using one of the pedal distortions and the clean fender twin cosm amp model.,i do like the clean cosm jc-120 and twin models for both direct recording and through power and or guitar amp,if you want the gt-3 to really sound great use the external effects loop and patch in your favorite amp modeler,i use a zoom gm-200 and the new behringer gdi21 and can get some great distortion sounds out of this unit,i built a switch box so i can switch between gm-200 and gdi21,i also use a crybaby wah with these units,the gm-200 is discontinuid but still can be found on ebay,the gdi21 is a no brainer it is 30.00 new!,as others said before you must experment with your effects chain,try different combinations of effects ect. i could go on and on about this unit.

Reliability : 10
i had it for about 6 years and is holding up great,all metal construction seems solid to me,i do baby this unit it never left my studio so i don't know how it would hold up on a gig but would say it should be fine.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never dealt with the company.

Overall Rating : 10
i am a hobbyest musician playing guitar over 20 years,i use the gt-3 into a laney gh100 solid state amp and marshall 1960a 4x12 cab.,i play blues to metal and the gt-3 sounds great with the amp modelers in the effects loop,i would give the gt-3 a 10 in this setup and a 6 with out the amp modelers patched in.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $369
Submitted 05/18/2005 at 08:13pm by Johnny
Email: JohnAFS1 at yahoo<dot>com

Ease of Use : No Opinion
Steep learning curve if one desires to truly master the possibilities here. Simple to learn if one merely desires to plug & play, and end up less than pleased.

I'm writing this review, not to praise or condemn the GT-3, but to get some facts straight:
1) things are not what they seem
2) the writers of the manual did not completely understand their own device
3) knobs are not inherently good
3a) buttons are not inherently evil
4) amp modelling may be a bad joke, but it can have a good punchline
5) the deeper I go, the deeper it gets

I'm tempted to stop here, hesitant to share what I've discovered, seeing as how eBay pricing is plummeting on the GT-3 recently (see? HC reviews DO have an effect), which will help me pick up a couple backups for about the price of 1 decent stompbox...

Oh well, I still have my GT-6 that I can use as a backup!

Sound Quality : No Opinion
So here goes:

1) The GT-3 (as well, the -6 & -8) has an embarrassment of options, configurablility, and controls; some of which operate exactly as expected, but most of which should be approached from a contrarian/creative vector. It's a bit like it's own MATRIX: nothing is as it seems.

2) Following the manual will lead you comfortably into the MATRIX, where you'll feel you've done all you can, but still faintly uneasy. The techs who wrote the manual just wanted to make sure you didn't break the thing first try. If you've learned the conventions of the GT-3 menu, and you're reasonably familiar with the devices represented by all the modules, you should now lay the manual carefully away & begin to challenge it's premises.

3) Many are anxious over the lack of knobs, broken-hearted really. I'm sure if you go over and look at the GT-6 reviews, someone must have spilled the beans that it's "knobs" are little more than digital adjusters, unlike the knobs on your SD-1 (which you turn to adjust & then use a sharpie to mark your favorite spot), the -6 knobs are only relative, and immediately reset your setting if you touch them (give me buttons that at least start from where you were). Contrary to most of the reviews below, the GT-3 does have knobs! Three physical ones & innumerable electronic ones. Knob #1 is the overall output knob; #2 is the Data Entry knob; #3 is the Expression Pedal. Yup! the expression pedal can be used to adjust any parameter, tone, etc. Hopefully I'll have time to explain further down.

3a) Although I've inadvertently goofed up my prize settings on my knob based stomps and multis many times, I've never caused an accidental adjustment by a little bump to my GT-3. Just as I can type faster than I write, I can page to menus & adjust (using the data wheel) much more quickly than I could if all parameters were represented by a knob (ever done any live mixing on a stadium sized board in a festival type event? you know what I mean).

4) Most everyone seems to agree, unless you're seeking walls of noise/shred/monstrosities, or, want 1 decent clean sound, the amp/preamp models are Hoovers. I suspect that this COSM thing is where an R&D department can dump serious cash & run afoul of the bean counters wringing their hands over the fact that, "it sounds good enough already... why make it perfect when no one will be able to tell the difference?" Good enough isn't good enough. HOWEVER... the models can be used in a completely different fashion. Again, I hope I'll be able to elaborate in a bit.

5) Through trial & (mostly) error, I've happened upon some methods that have just opened my eyes to how to approach a device like this. I'm finally beginning to create with it, not just trudge along behind the sheep in front of me. I've undone many of the concepts presented in the manual & found that there is power in this toy from other directions.

Reliability : No Opinion
Like a rock. Bought it in '99. Stepped on it thousands of times since then, and button-pushed possibly 100s of thousands of times! I experienced a problem saving patches a couple years ago (and, in frustration, went out & bought the GT-6: fine unit, just too big - letting another musician use it for now), but it was because the little watch battery was low. Replaced it & all's been great ever since.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I've had no occasion (Thank You, Lord!) to need support. CS in everything these days seems to be little more than an advertising slogan.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
OK. Here's my take on how to really use the GT-6 & enjoy it as what it really is: a collection of tones, effects, controls, switches, etc for enhancing my guitar experience, all in a very portable fraction of the space required for the actual items represented. I view it now as interactive pieces that I can plug & unplug at will, twisting their order, function, and concept to my purpose & sometimes my pleasant surprise.

First & most importantly, shut everything off: all preamps, models, speaker models, effects modules, EQs, everything (you can use the tuner/bypass (if you have it non-muted) to compare & make sure that nothing is left on. All you want is the tone your guitar was born with. I've found that everyone I know who uses any kind of multi, always takes a patch that they at least enjoy somewhat, and tries to tweak it into something good. Not a bad approach, just not the best.

Then, and this is important, play your axe for a bit (I actually play GT-3 directly into the input of my amp, sounds good with the GT-3 output knob at about 50%), while using a true bypass external switch pedal to go back and forth between your guitar's natural signal and the signal through the GT-3. You should notice a change in tone, especially if you have passive pickups (the GT-3 buffers your pickups & gives more punch to the high & low). Now, balance the levels so that the GT-3 signal & the bypassed signal are at the same level. You've probably done this at bedroom level so far. Take a few moments & turn up to gig levels (or as close as you can get) & repeat the process (things sound quite different turned up). Make note of what you like or dislike about the GT-3's sound.

At this point, you can use the sort-of macro/global EQing features of the GT-3 to make as close a match to your native guitar sound as possible: The UTILITY button takes you to two features: 1) output type simulation ("headphones/line out", "combo amp", etc) and 2) hi & lo EQ. I use both of these interactively to achieve a reasonable match. Don't be too discouraged if you can't get it exactly; plug into any buffered (non-true bypass) stompbox (all the Boss pedals, & most other mfg pedals, but not Barbers, Fulltones, etc), & you will find the same change in tone, even when they are "bypassed". You may even LIKE the tone the uneffected GT-3 offers!

Now that you've set a baseline, save this patch to a location of your choice (I save it to several places with a name containing a single character that, when I've begun to add effects, will show from where the patch originated (I put a # as the name of this blank patch). Upon this representation of your bare axe, you can begin to experiment with modules & EQs & such, but you'll know that you have started with the real thing.

I'm not sure how much more HC will let me type, so I'll just get you started the way I do into adding modules.

First, I don't use any of the preamps (models) for basic tone. I use the blank set-up & begin by adding EQ for clean tones, or one of the OD modules for anything from a bit of grit up through rocking drive. If you get your favorite amp or stomp overdrive and dial it to a setting you like, use your external bypass or looper (you won't want to use the effects loop because it disables the internal OD unless you want to spend endless hours scrolling back and forth between the loop and your OD choice) to switch back and forth with the GT-3, choosing an OD (Natural, Vintage, Blues, etc) that seems closest to your stomp in character and then tweaking it until you have a good match. Once you've gotten as close as you can, engage the EQ to finish any discrepancies in tone, hiss, mid boost or cut... I've done this many times to set up a variety of patches from just barely driven all the way through heavy crunch rhythm. Remember, this is all before adding any other effects.

Do I ever use the preamp models? You


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 04/02/2005 at 10:46am by Bryan Rensema
Email: bryan at brotherlush<dot>com

Ease of Use : 6
DEFINITELY not a piece of cake gear to use. BOSS really listened to users after the GT-3; the GT-6 and 8 are MUCH easier to use. That said, once you get the hang of using the GT-3, you will be zipping through the menus. Add the flexibility of editing patches on your computer and saving multiple banks, and it gets easier. It just has a pretty steep learning curve.

Sound Quality : 8
Recording quality - 9. I use this 90% of the time when I record. Visit www.brotherlush.com or www.myspace.com/brotherlush to hear the GT-3 in action. The unit is so versatile that it's usually easy to simply tweak a favorite setting to get what you're looking for. Unfortunately, this versatility sometimes leaves one having to choose from MANY great tones instead of searching for the right one. The wah isn't the best in the world but, coupled with the right amp model and it's good. You can't do the overbearing Kirk Hammet or Godsmack wahs but I hate that crap anyway. The fuzz setting is pretty weak as well. Harmonist is fun and I really like the tweak-ability of the ring modulator.

Live sound - 3. This is my personal opinion. I'm not a fan of their preamp to poweramp models. The direct sound is good but running the GT-3 through an amp like I would (if I used it live) leaves much to be desired. This is mostly because it's hard to tune the thing to the room. The GT-6 and 8 is easier in this respect with all their KNOBS!!

So, since I use this just for recording, I'll weight my rating on the optimistic side and give it a 7.5 (rounds to 8).

Also, my friend Eric in the band No Lily (www.nolily.com)uses a GT-3 live. It sounds great and, when he switches guitars, you can definitely tell a sonic difference. So, the GT-3 doesn't color your sound as much as one might think. To add to the confusion, Eric HATES the sound of the GT-3 for direct recording. Different folks, different strokes, I guess.

Reliability : 9
Mine broke once. Had it in my luggage and the luggage monkeys must have kicked it and impacted the little output knob. This broke the pot internally. I ordered a new one from BOSS (like $4 or so), soldered it on, and it works great! I think this is a fairly random occurence and I like the fact that it's semi user-servicable so I'd use it without a backup.

Customer Support : 10
See above:
Boss customer support was rapid, great, and cheap for the part!

Overall Rating : 8
I'll say that I play progressive pop. Not quite punk, but good songs that push the envelope. This is great for recording and making cool noises. I'm still thinking of ways to incorporate it into my live rig (mostly as a noisemaker). I still use it daily for reording. I'd LOVE to save-up for a GT-8 but, if you don't have $500 for a GT-8, go to Ebay and you can score a GT-3 for under $150! Hell, if you want, you can buy mine so that I can get get my GT-8! 3 years ago, I'd give this puppy a perfect 10 but, now seeing that Boss is 2 generations past it, it still gets a strong 8 overall. It was one of my best buys ever!


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $250
Submitted 03/28/2005 at 10:21am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 8
I don't think this unit is that difficult to use. Is it complex? Yes. This is a powerful unit, it has to incorporate some level of complexity. I found the key functions to be very logical.

Sound Quality : 8
I play a les paul > fulltone wah > GT3 with TS9 in the dist loop > '68 bassman50 > marshall 1960a. Sound quality of this unit is okay. Newer versions will have better sounds with higher bit rates and whatnot. Proababy my biggest disappointment is the reaction time on the harmonizer and pitch bend settings. Sometimes, it really searches for the 2nd note. I'm eager to see how the GT8 performs here.

Reliability : 10
My GT3 is a drunk magnet. I've had at least 10 different drunks fall on it, more than several drinks spilled on it and recently, someone knocked over a server's tray full of dinner plates onto it. I never thought I'd say that. It still works perfectly.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 8
I play rock covers. This unit lets me do everything I need to do. I looked at the GT6 but, this may sound weird, it was just too big. The GT3 sounds good enough and takes up much less space. I use TS9 in the external distortion loop and a separate Wah before the unit. Another good investment is a separate Boss on/off switch. Hook that to the ext jack and set it to engage the tuner on all the patches. That way, you don't waste the Ctr pedal for a tuner or have to bend down to press the small button. A wise $30 investment. I'd probably prefer the sound quality of stomp boxes but you'd end up with way too many if you want all the flexibility of a unit like this.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $200 used
Submitted 03/27/2005 at 05:30pm by Loren Aguey
Email: sponger949<at>yahoo dot com

Ease of Use : 9
Read the manual, and as long as you don't have a learning disability you should pick it up in no time, editing is pretty easy. For people complaing about the little volume knob, on the back of the unit, come on now, you see that big pedal thing on the right side of the unit, thats what its used for!!! volume, wah, among other things. And for those complaing about have to bend over to touch the little tuner button, read the manual guys, and you find that one can easily set the control pedal to the tuner so you can activate it just like you're changing a patch setting.

Sound Quality : 10
First off, HALF THE PEOPLE REVIEWING THIS THING DON'T KNOW JACK SHIT ABOUT COMING UP WITH A GOOD TONE. Try using EQ, effects chains etc... Everyone complaing about the distortions presets need to learn how to come up with their own tone, which is what this thing is perfect for. I'm not all that crazy about the distortions presets either, but that doesn't make this thing any less capable of producing ripping tone. My band plays anything from punk, metal, ska/ reggae and this thing handles it all with flying colors. Out of all the presets, I use maybe 2 or 3, the mellow wah is perfect for reggae stuff, and the LP-ST setting is a wicked clean tone that I use a lot with my neck pickups. All the other stuff I made myself, and the distortions I came up with are wicked, and most gigs I play I have guys coming up to me and asking me about me how I get such a beefy, chunky distortion. I tell them its a 3 part equation, first off, my sovtek tube half stack is a russian beast that handles low end like nobodies business, 2nd, my guitars, I play an Ibanez rg-550 with a seymour duncan and just got an esp ltd h-1000 deluxe with emgs, both sound awesome, are perfecty capable of ripping distortion, and have thier distinct tones. The 3rd part of the equation, is the Gt-3. The flexibility of the paramaters on this thing are extremely versatile and I would use it over a rack full of pedals anyday of the week. When I use it on other amps it stills sounds great, when I plugged it straight into pro tools it was not quite as good, but not bad, I'd rather mike an amp anyway, but thats just me. I like the character that an amp adds to the sound. Just make sure if you do plug it direct to change the utilites settings to lineout/headphones, otherwise it will sound like shit, and vice versa, don't have on the lineout setting when you're playing through and amp. I use it for recording and gigs.

Reliability : 10
to steal what seems to be the phrase of the day, this thing really is built like a tank and have yet to have any problems with it. I use it for recording and gigs, don't leave home without it. I've had mine for about 3 years now with no problems.

Customer Support : No Opinion
n/a

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing for over 10 years, punk, metal, rock, reggae, acoustic stuff, this things awesome. It got stolen at a party and I bought another one. I could have upgraded to a GT-6, but I couldn't really find a good enough reason to upgrade when I was perfectly satisfied with what I had, the only thing I could think of that I would have liked better are the knobs instead of the buttons, but big fuckin' deal, I'm not about to pay a couple hundred bucks more for knobs. I don't need anymore presets when I use very few of them anyway, and although the newer ones have a lot more user patches, the gt-3 has 35 banks each with 4 programable user patches(means you get 35x4 personal patches), I can assign a bank to each song and have 4 different presets for each song, not to mention the control setting which can modify each patch for a solo/volume/delay boost or whatever else. The only situation I would need more user patches is if I was playing a gig where we play 35 songs and I use 4 completely different patches in each song, not likely. In reality, my first 2 banks each have 2 of my signatures distortions, and 2 clean tones that I use for most of our songs. And a few of our songs require their own bank for wah and other stuff, but I have yet to come close needing anymore space for user presets.

Not too sound like some pompous asshole who thinks he has the best rig, but seriously, my 3 part equation described above in the sound quality section, gives me better overall sound than pretty much any other guitar players I have seen in person, and the gt-3 is a very big part of that. ok, i saw megadeth play and their sound is impeccable, but I'm not comparing myself to Dave Mustaine or anyone else of that caliber. But even if I was I think I could hold my own sound quality wise. There is nothing better than playing a gig, having guys in other bands who play 3 thousand dollar les pauls, through a ridiculously overpriced marshall or boogie halfstalks, and have them come up to me asking about how I get my tone. Anyone with a knowledge of how to come up with good sounds can get damn near any sort of sound they want from this thing, its got plenty of shit on their that I'll never consider using, but as far as I'm concerned, thats one more reason not to pony up for a GT-6 or GT-8.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $250
Submitted 03/27/2005 at 10:41am by Luke
Email: guitarplayer<at>myway dot com

Ease of Use : 7
This pedal is not the easiest to find a good sound. But if you tinker around with it for a while you will find a good sound. It is extremly difficult to figure out though. And reading the manual is like trying to read chinese! There are some good sides to this though. If you havent ever had experience with and digital effects like delay time, chorus level, wah level ect. It will help you learn the steps to creating a good tone. But other wise i will have to say that you will have to take time out with the GT-3.

Sound Quality : 10
The sound on the presets in just plain horrible. Some aren't to bad, but alot of them just dont make anysense. I started out with presets and none of them were worth a crap. I gradually got better with making my own sound really began to create some not half bad tones. I mainly listen to bands like the 80's metal bands. And I think that they key to getting a good distortion is to be picky with what you want. Dont say oh thats good enough. Have other people listen to your sounds ask them if it sounds good, ask them what they think. I got a pretty good GNR tone just by having a metal distortion and on the preamp setting using a clean tone. This way i achive that clean but heavy sound. And I recive no annoying buzzing when I set it down. My friends cant even tell its on!

Reliability : 8
I've used this slightly with other people. I would eaisly take this unit to a gig. There might be some problems with that seeing that I would have to throw in another extension cord. Mainly because the outlet cord is short. I might have sub-pedals though, just to have like a solo tone or a wah tone.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to deal with the company>

Overall Rating : 9
One thing I notice about alot of the reviews is that they all comment on the bad distortion. The unit however shouldnt make any noises. Most of the reviews that say that are all used so they might consider repair.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $375.00
Submitted 03/21/2005 at 01:11am by Monkaton
Email: k9cramerknst<at>earthlink dot net

Ease of Use : 8
I bought this unit about six years ago. After noodling around for awhile it becomes fairly easy to negotiate the different effects. Manual was ok, but most manuals are not that user friendly, in my experience.

Sound Quality : 8
I run the GT-3 through my Portastudio and use it exclusively for recording since I'm not playing guitar in a band at this time. Some of the presets are good and a lot of them I never even use. I have about 40 different effects that I have programmed. I use those about 90% of the time.

The distortion is not very good, the wah effects are not the best, although I haven't spent a lot of time tweaking the old wah-wah. I do like the different amp sounds, limiter, tremelo, chorus, delay and reverb. I also like the acoustic settings. One thing that I do is to find a program that I like and then use the same parameters, but switch the amp settings. This gives me a range of different sounds, but also themes that relate to one another.

I can get a fairly good "Yer Blues" and other Beatle guitar sounds, especially using my Epiphone Casino. There are some good crunch sounds and a pretty good Pete Townsend "Live at Leeds" sound that I can get, especially with my SG and Blues Bird.

Reliability : 8
I have never had a problem with the unit, but then it has never left the house. It has a metal housing which seems very sturdy.

Customer Support : 7
Never dealt with the company, but never had to.

Overall Rating : 8
If you like straight ahead old school rock and roll and British rock and roll, you can get good sounds. Some of the metal sounds are also pretty good if you don't use the distortion, but stick with the power amps.

I've been playing for 36 years and I like the fact that this is one unit instead of seven or eight pedals strung together. If it was lost or stolen, I would seriously look at the Vox tube processor as a replacement.

It has been a good processor for use in recording.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $400
Submitted 03/19/2005 at 11:37pm by fonso
Email: iambongbong<at>nethere dot com

Ease of Use : 10
well i have to admit, at first i was overwhelmed with the process of programing the GT-3. I just read the programing section of the manual just to learn how to edit and save, and the rest just pretty much fool with it til Ifound a good sound. it really is pretty easy to use once you learn the basics. i like how there is a CRL (control) foot switch to turn on and off certain effects, and also the expression pedal that can control volume, the wah, the amount of effect, the rate of effects, or all at the same time. the CRL button can turn on and off the tuner also. the CRL can pretty much turn on and off everything on the GT3, even the expression pedal.

Sound Quality : 10
my setup is pretty simple: ltd eclipse, ibanez artist-> shure wireless or planet wave cords -> Boss GT3 -> korg rack tuner -> rocktron husch super C -> rocktron velocity 120 stereo power amp -> marshall 1960a lead slanted cab set to stereo.
my set up may sound like its complicated but its just guitar to rack gear - to speakers. i have only this one amp but because of the GT-3 i can mimmic or create endless sounds. from hardcore crunch or death metal chug to acoustic clean. the possiblities are enormous.
most people here bag on the sound quality of the distorion, but they just dont know shit about digital equipments. the trick to getting good distorion is all in the EQing. first set the utility based on the correct power source you are using (ie..combo, stack, power amp, etc..)then choose the amp you want in the preamp section and set all the EQ evenly flat to all 50. then select the equalization set it to the sound you want. go back to the preamp EQ and tweak it even more to your desired tone. a little compression helps a lot also. i really think that a tube power amp should improve my set up because i've played my Gt3 with a mesa boogie dual rectifier just using the power slave and it sounded more alive than ever. so for the distorion sound, i mainly use the preamp. i only use the overdrive/ dist button for noisy effects...or, just pick a pretty good sounding preset, tweak it then hit the write button, then viola.
the utility button also has the master Eq. so rather than painstakingly EQing each setting to match each concert venues or room, you can simply eq just one for the entire processor to your desired tone.
Remember that all guitars only sounds good out of a good amp or vice versa. same thing goes for a good processor like the GT3.

Reliability : 10
i've been gigging to many bars, clubs, coffee houses, skate parks, college events, and house parties for five years with the GT3 and the rest of my set up, and it hasnt failed me yet. it pretty much gets used approximately 10 hours a week for at least 2 hours continuously each session.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never had to deal with them

Overall Rating : 10
i play in three bands. Floating Holiday (very structured rock), the wrong Fiasco (heavy alternative), and Sfumato (jam rock). those bands demand different sounds from my playing, but my set up handles them all. the GT3 is trully flexible.
ive been playing guitar since i started playing in bands and that was 8 years ago. i use to play with a bunch of boss pedals but they were a hasle because i like using more than at least three pedals at a time plus the amp footswitch. so i bought a processor.
the one thing that i think can improve this particular instrument is for it have a bigger, brighter, colored LCD screen. i've gigged with the GT3 on outdoor occasions probably 5 times and remembering that i bobbled stepping on the right button mainly because i couldnt read which bank i was on. also the power cord is way too short and the adapter box of the cord shouldnt be in the middle but right on the plug but with the space saver design so it doesnt hog the outlet space on my power conditioner.
i think a great tube power amp and maybe a new guitar should improve my sound tremendously. wishful thinking. i wish i were filthy rich so i can buy prostitutes, and guitars.
if somebody steals my GT3 i would definite kill that person andbuy another one , or better yet get the GT5 which is almost identical but has more programable banks and one extra footswitch. however i believe that boss may have discontinued producing these models due to the release of the GT-6. so if one day my Gt3 breaks down on me (godforbid) i will send it to BOSS and have their technicians repair it back to new. the programs may get lost but i can always reprogram it.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: used
Submitted 02/11/2005 at 12:53pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 6
Once you get the hang of it, it's relatively easy to program. The built-in tuner is hard to see.

Sound Quality : 5
I tried the GP3 with a EMG-equipped Strat through a Carvin 212 tube amp. Normally, I go for a very compressed clean sound, a chorus-y sound, a good OD (like Pete Townshend's in most of the mid-70s Who recordings), and a lead channel with a little more OD and some delay to fatten it up.

The compressor is typical BOSS -- fairly quiet, and "ring-y." I would imagine it records fairly well direct. The distortion stinks, period. The chorus/flanging is OK, but nothing spectacular. The delays are limited and hard to program. The reverb is thin and unnatural sounding. Some of the other gimmcky effects are fun for about 10 minutes.

Reliability : 10
It seems solid enough.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 2
I bought this for live use only. I was sorely disappointed. I found that if I supplemented it with my old Morley chorus/flanger, a RAT overdrive and a tuner, I could tolerate it for at least a gig. The only remotely useful thing about it is the built-in expression pedal, which despite its sticky, cheap feeling response acts pretty well as a "volume knob" for your feet.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: 20000 (yen) used
Submitted 01/23/2005 at 12:40am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : No Opinion

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 8

I am amazed at the number of responses here.

This unit works very well in a studio. I use it as a direct injection unit straight into my mixer (ie no amp) and it gives me everything I need and sounds great. (I haven't managed to get a good funk type sound but I haven't put the time into getting one yet).

My one critcism is the tune function is a small button, that really should be a large pedal so as not to require bending down.

If you want a unit to use with an amp and in a live venue do what Boss themselves say, use the ME-50.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 01/17/2005 at 08:01am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : No Opinion
I tried this unit for the first time at a gig and on the first break went scambling to set up my old pedals. I have to agree, the distortion sucks and nothing matches the clean tube sound of my amp. I tried to manually program the sound I liked, but as we all know, what it sounds like in your living room and what it sounds like at the gig are two different things. I kind of liked the accoustic guitar sound and some of the delays were nice, but not any better than my regular pedals. I play a Stratocaster with noisless pickups. My needs are just a good clean tube sound, A good distortion, and Delay and reverbs. For me 2 pedals with my amp do this fine, I saw this unit used for $150 and said, what the hell, I will give it a try, But it does not work gor me on stage. Guess Iif something isn't broke, why fix it? but I may keep the unit just to annoy my wife when she is watching TV. :)

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 01/12/2005 at 07:54am by Stefan
Email: none

Ease of Use : No Opinion

Sound Quality : No Opinion
I got the opportunity to try out a GT-3 with my amp. I was planing to get one, I needed a few effects, mosty Delay, Reverb, Chourus. But I first wanted to try it out. Luckally I did!
It's always important for me how effects change the original amp-sound. Well, the GT-3 really damped and muffled my amps tone! I have a Engl Tube Amp, the Thunder 50. Maybe not the best amp, but still tube.
I also tried to mix the original amp sound with the GT-3's sound (The Thunder has a blend-over knob, from only dry to only wet), it didn't work either. (the original amp signal is digitalized as well, so there is a small time diffrence between the original signal and the one from the GT-3)
I'm going to get a simple Multi-Effect Unit, WITHOUT preamp section, maybe a G-Major. That's probally the right thing for me!!!
Good advice: Try out the GT-3 before you buy it, it could be fine with your amp, but I have the feeling that it isn't too good in conjunction with a tube amp!

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 01/02/2005 at 04:17am by Stef Hamilton

Ease of Use : 5
You get the best results using the manual mode.
The preset are horrible. Take the time to build your sound.
The display can be hard to read.
The pedals are too small.
I wish it had knobs like the gt6.

Sound Quality : 7
As everyone else says the distortions are pointless. I use an od3 and a ds1 to take care of this.
But the trem is excellent (better than the tr2), the delays and reverbs pretty nice...there is alot you can do with board, but you need to learn to assemble your sounds. It's got a world of wacky misc. sounds that make people look up, too. There is alot you can do with this.

Reliability : 10
Never let me down at any gig any time (In 3 years).

Customer Support : No Opinion
n/a

Overall Rating : 8
I'm the only guitarist in my country ska punk band The Drug Squad (thedrugsquad.net), this unit gives me a great variety of options and sounds. It add alot of colour to the set. But, use it as a link in your chain, not exclusively.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/17/2004 at 03:38am by MattM
Email: fatgraymatt at yahoo<dot>com

Ease of Use : 5
Takes alot of fiddling with it to get good sounds but once you figure out how to work everything it's pretty easy. I lost my manual a long time ago.

Sound Quality : 7
For what I use it for, (time-based effects mainly), the sound quality is excellent, but the amp models, distortion and wah are pretty weak in my opinion. I play an Ibanez Jem into a Crate Blue Voodoo tube head, and in a pinch I can get by just fine with just my guitar, amp, and a delay (Boss DD-5) pedal. My full rig is an Ibanez Jem into a Dunlop crybaby wah, Zakk Wylde overdrive pedal, the GT-3, and the BV head into a Marshall 1960 cab with vintage celestion 30's. I get plenty of distortion from my amp, the OD pedal just fattens things up nicely. The GT-3's distortion doesn't hold a candle to a tube head's so I use it for the delay, chorus, flanger, EQ, noise-gate and, once in awhile, the slicer effect. The great thing about the GT-3 is the patches. You can have up to four distinct sounds at any given time with just the stomp of a pedal. My main patches consist of a rhythm sound using the EQ, noise gate and a little chorus, and a lead sound that is similar, but boosts the volume, low end and adds some delay. I love being able to hit one pedal and have my solo just scream out loud and clear. I use the other aforementioned effects for texture once in awhile but my rhythm and lead patches are what carry me through 90 percent of a gig. If you like to use a wah, keep it in front of the GT-3 in your signal chain and don't even bother with the built-in one. I send my GT-3 through my amp's effects loop and it's perfectly quiet, adding no noise.

Reliability : 10
Had it for 5 years, 50+ gigs, hundreds of rehearsals, spilled beer on it, knocked it around, it's built like a tank. I always bring a backup delay just in case but have never needed it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
NA

Overall Rating : 8
Like I said, I don't care for the amp models, distortion or the wah but I don't need it for that. Having the GT-3 is like having all the time-based Boss pedals under one hood, being able to mix-and-match them as you like, plus control of volume, EQ and a noise gate. The other guitar player in my band likes to have all his pedals, (like 12 of them!), spread out around him in a semi-circle but he has to do a pedal dance every time he changes his sound. Plus, our singer is a lunatic and he ends up kicking or accidentally engaging one of those pedals at least once every show. With the GT-3 and some time spent programming patches to your taste, (the pre-programmed patches suck), you can dramatically change your sound with just one stomp.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/27/2004 at 08:53am by paul

Ease of Use : 7
Try all the factory presets to see what you like, but I HIGHLY RECOMEND plainly using the manual mode so you can create your own pedal chain, allowing you to turn on diff effects at your leisure. This makes it a heck of a lot easier to use and allows you recreate a pedalboard feel.

GT3 v GT6 ? Obviously bigger and better is the 6 and Im jealous of the actual KNOBS, the flat buttons are not prefered.

Sound Quality : 8
After 5-6 years I just fell in love with it again. Why? Because I put the distortion in front of the preamp. I use the turbo OD, and MS1959I+II. I also use the compressor at the start of the chain. Solid thick tone, without being to razorlike, and not to dull, yet sustainy. Move over Trey!

Reliability : 10
after 5-6 years, no probs whatsoever.

Customer Support : 9
boss = tanks. I called them once for a simple q, they answered it right away.

Overall Rating : 8
Again, try the manual edit mode and experiment with different signal flows and effects.


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: 400 (Euros)
Submitted 11/26/2004 at 04:57am by Pedro Leonidas

Ease of Use : 7
has nice workable parameters...altough you cannot use the factory settings, wich are terrible. Make a fresh start and add effects as you need them...dont overuse effects, or you will have more engeneer working than playing

Sound Quality : 6
I use only the reverbs, delay, chorus and modulation, the distortions are terrible, except the vintage that can be worked a little to an acceptable level, cosm amp simulator is pretty lame, and the direct sound is terrible...So I use it as a modulation, and spacial effects processor, and volume control mostelly, and it does work pretty good at those levels. Not a complete unit, you will certainlly need external distortion, wah, and maybe some other...

Reliability : 9
Never failed me...and is sturdy built...no backup needed.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 6
The features I use, are workable at any musical style, but if you dont use much diferent effects, you better buy separate pedals instead of this unit, because some features are not good at all, and some are unusable...


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $120 used
Submitted 11/05/2004 at 06:54pm by Brian
Email: moabnut at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 7
There are so many parameters to adjust that it can be very difficult for someone impatient or without tech skills. I went through all the patches when I got it and was not too impressed. But after I learned how to tweak it I fell in love with it. Basically I set up my own patches by turning every effect off and made different patches with one effect at a time. exactly as you would do it with pedals. THIS IS CRITICAL! You will never get your sounds right trying to adjust 10 effects at the same time. As said before, the effect chain is also very important.

Sound Quality : 9
The GT-3 sounds different with every amp but you can get great sounds out of ANY amp, even my 9V battery powered mini Marshall stack that I bought for $20. I have to adjust my patches to my amps though. Funny thing is I can get my favorite sound out of the headphone jack plugged into my computer speakers (with a sub) on a patch that sounds absolutely awful on any of my guitar amps (Comp Turbo). I mostly play a Schecter guitar using a Carvin amp. This setup gives me the most versatility.
The sounds are awesome. I usually only use about 2-3 effects at a time though, I hardly ever use the factory patches. I don?t like a lot of effects at one time and I fine tune my favorite ones to my preferences.
It is easy to make the GT-3 sound bad. This is not a bad thing, it just means it is versatile. What is bad on one amp could sound like gold on another

Reliability : 10
Built like a tank. Ive never had a problem. I would gig w/o backup. Who could afford backup? There are too many other things Id rather have than 2 of something I already have.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never delt with them

Overall Rating : 9
I use the GT-3 with a Schecter C+ with a SD 59 pickup in the bridge. Also a stock Yamaha Pacifica. I have a 100W Tube Marshall JCM 900 stack and a Solid state 100W Carvin SX-200 combo 2X12 combo I use for a cab and amp. I also have a cheap Matrix 2X8 practice amp. Other effects pedals I have are an Ibanez TS-9DX and Dunlop Wah. These are both high quality effects that I never touch anymore since I got the GT-3. I can almost duplicate their sounds.
I can get pretty close to just about any sound I want. I play Metallica, SRV, 3 doors down, Eagles, Led Zeplin etc...
I?ve played for about 11 years now, I can hold my own with other guitarists. I have a pretty respectable rig for being a poor college student for the last 8 years (med student) I was a purest with no pedals till about 2 years ago when I got ?the bug? to find better sounds. The bug was squashed by buying the GT-3. I would buy this anytime over the newer versions because of the cost vs. return. I remember drooling over this thing when it was $400 new. I don?t think the newer ones are much better, just cost more.



Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $400
Submitted 10/19/2004 at 02:44pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 8
First of all. I read through these submissions and it looks like some people are technically expierenced and others are not. You can get whatever sound you want with this. You just have to know how to set up good effects from the ground up. Pay attention to the effects chain as you would if you had several stomp boxes in a row, this is critical in getting the right sound. This is a PRE amp, meaning don't use it in a effects loop, that would be using it as a In between amp. How do think that is going to work right?

Sound Quality : 8
Sound quality can be achieved if you have any expierience using processors. Using it with a Tubeworks stereo power amp. Can get the Preamp tones to work just fine.

Reliability : 9
Very sturdy. Have owned this since they first came out 4 yrs ago. All the new effects have all this useless space cadet sounds that I would never need, unless you were on acid all the time.

Customer Support : 10
Never had to ask anyone about this.

Overall Rating : 9


Product: Boss GT-3
Price Paid: US $350
Submitted 09/25/2004 at 03:43pm by Joel Van Mersbergen
Email: joelvan77<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : 10
Editing each patch is incredibly user friendly and easy. I often throw my shoes off and edit the patches with my toes.IN THEORY one should be able to get any sound out of the GT-3. There is the COSM, an EQ, a SUB EQ, amp simulators, multiple distortions, utility settings, etc. not to mention their online advice and tutorials. But if you're like me you don't want to spend hours and hours perfecting one patch much less multiple patches. I have spent many evenings sitting down with my Marshall VS100 and headphones and (four years later) finally created a patch I like. So if you don't mind the headaches of fine tuning and tweaking numerous variable of each of your patches then it may not be as much of an annoyance as it has been to me. I find stomp boxes easier to edit; I find it confusing to not have knobs but just numbers on a screen. The manual is very large at about 80 pages, but I would have liked for it to go more in depth with the effects and uses.

Sound Quality : 4
I play a Gibson Les Paul Standard and a Fender Strat to the GT-3 and through a Marshall VS100 valvestate (big mistake) combo. I am a fan of BOSS sounds. Always have been, since I started playing 11 years ago, and always will be. I like many bands from Smashing Pumpkins to PropellerHeads to U2, but I'd say the sounds I most like to replicate would be bands like Delirious or Tom Petty or any good crunchy rhythm sound. The only way I've found to get this is with the MS1956I amp simulator and I just adjust the VOLUME and GAIN settings. While I love the SD-1, BD-2 or even the Metal Zone pedals for some nice rich warm distortions I DO NOT like the distortions of the GT-3. They are all too shreddy and high pitched; I won't use the distortions even when I'm just having fun in a jam, they're terrible. I always use the LINE OUT setting otherwise I feel that I will kill my ears. As with BOSS single stomp boxes, the modulations, delays and other effects are beautiful.

Reliability : 10
Built like a TANK! Never had any technical problems.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to use them.

Overall Rating : 6
I've been playing for 11 years and have managed to use the GT-3 for 4 of those years, but now I'm looking to get rid of it. The GT-3 just helped to solidify my belief that no digital module can fully replicate any good analog sound (the only thing to change my views has been the Fender Cyber Twin) Possibly if I had a tube amp I may find that the sounds of the GT-3 may be de-shredded. Very nice if you want it just for the delay and modulation effects. In fact, its great if you don't ever want to use the amp simulators or the distortions. The amp simulators sound nothing like they are named and the distortions all sound like death metal shred. Now if you want to spend hours and hours and hours studying and modifying each parameter then this is a great project for you, but if you want to "set it and forget it" Invest in some single pedals. If it were stolen I'd collect the money and put it towards a Mesa Boogie. Happy shoppin!

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