Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
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Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/24/2009
at 06:09pm
by pololevu
Ease of Use
:
10
Just twiddle the knobs and see what comes out! Pretty straightforward. Access to the battery is fiddly, though at least you don't need any tools (except for a coin) and you don't really want to run this on batteries anyway...
Sound Quality
:
9
Guitar goes into this, then a DDL, then into an amp, sounds great! The unit is very quiet, there is a small change in level - a slight boost - when it's on, but it isn't anything to worry about. I really like the sound, from subtle to dead choppy, great!
Reliability
:
10
I've had this for about 4 years, maybe more. It's been subjected to both a hot humid climate and a cold, damp one without issue. It hasn't been used a whole lot, but the thing is really, really solid and I would definitely gig without a backup.
One point though, I strongly urge anyone to use this pedal with a good power brick. I was running it on batteries for a while, thought it sounded ok, then one day it sounded very, very weak even though the led was still nice and bright. I whacked a regulated 9v supply into it and straight away the effect was really rich and strong, problem solved.
Customer Support
:
10
I haven't had to contact them about this stompbox, but I have contacted them in the past with queries about amps and they have always responded promptly and have been extremely helpful. I was considering buying the 'reflector' reverb pedal in the same series as this one, but I saw a number of negative reviews regarding reliability here on HC. I emailed Marshall for comment and as usual they replied very quickly. Not only did they claim to have resolved the known problems, they offered to refund me in full if I bought one and it failed. What more could you ask for?
Overall Rating
:
10
If it was stolen/lost, I'd buy another one. I like the style and weight almost as much as I like the sound. Shiny knobs are sometimes a bit hard to see, but there are many other fx that have similar, at least these are nicely knurled so sweaty fingers can grip 'em.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: GBP 23 USED
Submitted 03/21/2009
at 05:34pm
by JohnM
Ease of Use
:
6
Now discontinued though still stocked in some shops, and often coming up on ebay, this pedal is a bargain if you want any of the following;
- stereo split of guitar signal to 2 amps
- tremelo, hard to soft
- panning, fairly basic
- goose signal a bit, add treble, at end of effects chain, in vibrato mode
It is a bit puzzling to use in fact, if you are expecting vibrato, because there ain't none! What the vibrato option seems to do is to put the signal out of phase, thus subjectively boosting your treble and volume. What's crazy about it is that one output still outputs tremelo when the vibrato mode is engaged; on the plus side, this enables you to record 2 tracks of subtly treated guitar simultaneously; on the minus side, so what? I can do that another way and where's my stereo vibrato? The vibrato is pathetic, doesn't even modulate a quarter-tone let alone a semitone. It's an interesting and effective pedal but to call this a vibrato is wrong.
Sound Quality
:
7
2 small amps, one a 30w transistor bass amp and the other a modded 70s Vibrochamp with a Weber speaker, and a heavily modded System III Strat. I had no noise issues at all with this pedal, as I was using a 9v supply with plenty of headroom; it does have a good sound and is useful as a stereo split box, and for putting back some of the spark into the guitar signal, if placed near the end of the chain. The tremelo effect is very good and pans nicely in stereo, but as a vibrato it's a non-starter and the Marshall Supervibe does that much better; when this effect pedal is chained into that one or vice versa, some extraordinary results can be achieved;add a good slapback or reverb and you're well into Link Wray/Chris Isaacs territory. Time-based stereo effects can often be a curse as well as a blessing; there is always going to be a perceived increase in volume OR change in tone when the effect is switched in, and that's the trouble with this pedal as well as being one of its interesting features. The soud quality is good, very good, but can you use it?
Reliability
:
8
Yes you can depend on it; please ignore the review later on in these pages that seems to take issue with the country of manufacture, I've opened this thing up and it's very well put together. I would use this pedal simply as a signal splitter box at the end of the chain, and put it on a mild vibrato setting which would bring back any lost top end to the guitar signal. For all that, I don't know how often I'd switch it in.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No. See below.
Overall Rating
:
6
This and the Marshall Supervibe pedal are now discontinued and come up regularly on ebay at a bargain price, usually half of retail price. Both are stereo output, both a bit off-the-wall in their design but extremely well put together. This is a good stereo tremelo/pan pedal but the weak, almost non-existent vibrato lets it down. Then again, the vibrato setting is useful, as noted above, to goose your guitar signal a bit at the end of the chain. However as the Supervibe also does this (arguably better) on certain settings I think that's the one to keep. If the vibrato was a 'proper' vibrato, this would be a very good pedal indeed but I don't think it could be modded. Close but no cigar.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: USD 40
Submitted 07/09/2008
at 10:26am
by Marshall Unlucky.
Ease of Use
:
7
Easy enough. You twiddle the knobs.
Sound Quality
:
7
I bought this to use with a Blues Junior and latterly ahve used it with a Peavey Classic 30 with a cab. It sounded ok.
Reliability
:
1
Heres the beef. Its conked out on me. ive used this so little in the 5 -6 years ive had it. Literally for HOURS. Its been in my case for years not ever getting touched, i took it out to have a pootle on it the other day and its doing nothing. It lights up and slightly alters the volume but doesnt modulate in the slightest. Ive used brand new 9v duracells and 2 variable voltage PSUs. Nothing. Ive contacted Marshall and ive heard sweet FA from them. I have a thing with Marshall. I bought a JCM800 Combo brand new in the mid 80's and the thing was the biggest pile of unuseable microphonic shyte i have EVER owned. I dip my toe back in the Marshall pool again many years later and get screwed again.
Customer Support
:
1
See above. Should be ashamed of themselves. Buy British. Bollox to that.
Overall Rating
:
1
Was an OK pedal. Remebering that Vib trem is an effect you dont over do, it would have been sufficient in a live set up. But it didnt work when it was called upon. Ive seen plenty other reports on similar faults on this and other pedals since my regrettable purchase.
Avoid Marshall pedals.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: USD 36.50
Submitted 06/09/2008
at 11:34am
by bendrix
Ease of Use
:
10
extremley easy to use, and very simple.
Sound Quality
:
10
I am just blown away with the quality of this pedal for it's price! one of the best things I have ever bought for value. It adds a slight boost in volume when turned on, which I find is good, as it's extremley subtle. I use it before my overdrive/distortion fx as I like it to sound gentle> my fx setup is as follows: JJ Retro Guitar fitted with Bare Knuckle Pickups, a Mule and a BKP90>(pedaltrain2 board)>Keeley Comp>Teese RMC3 Wha>Marshall Vibrotrem>Keeley Fuzz Head>Keeley Katana Boost>Keeley True Bypass Looper (Line 6 Liqua Flange + Boss DD3 MIJ) in the loop, into a Vox VR30. The Vibrotrem is by far the cheapest pedal I own on the board, but don't let this put you off, it sounds great. It has a really nice vibrato as well the tremelo, you can also get a LOT of sounds out of this box. I've not even had it for 2 weeks and I am in love with it already! It's true bypass, and to me it sounds very analog like and always warm. 10/10 I am 100% satisfied with it!
Reliability
:
10
It seems like its really built to last! very well built and made from solid metal, nothing like a boss or line 6, these are much beefier. I have owned an original JH-1, which I now regret selling as it sounded amazing, bought in 1998, I once threw it down a corridor at school several times, and it is still working to this day as far as I know.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I have had no problems with it yet! can't comment.
Overall Rating
:
10
for it's price you really won't find a better tremelo pedal than this if you want more of a vintage trem, and also need a vibrato. I have actually compared this to a Roger Mayer, Voodoo Labs Boss and Electro Harmonix, this is the one that sounded the best! I thought that the marhsall was a good sise too, but basically if you need a tremolo then I recommend this one, and the vibrato is a beautifull vintage effect, I found I love this maybe more than tremelo for some songs. The pedal can also be used in the studio or live with ease, in fact since getting this pedal, I am starting to hate all other modulation pedals, especially chorus and univibe, vibrato seems better as it is less of an 'effect' you just 'feel' it, hope that makes sense.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: GBP 36.50
Submitted 06/02/2008
at 06:21pm
by Egor
Ease of Use
:
10
Sound Quality
:
10
Reliability
:
10
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
this pedal could not be better value! It is better than most boutique pedals I have heard, and it also has a vibrato mode! which is unique, but for ??36.50 it is by far the best quality tremolo pedal and most versitile, plus it sounds amazing! never harsh all my other pedal are real expensive 'boutique' pedals and this stands strong next to them, and it has excellent true bypass circuit that is no different to ??200 + pedals, it sucks no tone at all used with the best leads and setup. It has a vintage warmth, and is actually better than most valve amp tremolo's as its more adjustable.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/02/2007
at 02:01pm
by Mr. Personality
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Didn't get manual. Knobs are metal and easy to use, though small. Agree with a previous reviewer that outputs/inputs are a little confusing to use, but use the mono output for vintage tremolo and the input 2 for intense, staccato tremolo.
Sound Quality
:
9
Sweet. Don't know why so many dis' the vibrato. If you ever have the need for that tasty intricate Chris Isaak(sp???)pitch bending sound, this pedal has it! The tremolo is every bit as good as the Fender SuperReverb I played back in the 60s. Actually, it's better, because it's just as dramatic and not as noisy. Also I LIKE the subtle boost (VERY suttle) when engaging the tremolo. When I had the SuperReverb, I always had to turn the volume on the amp up a notch so that the sound would carry in a live application. Don't even think of using a battery to power this unit. Seller provided a Dano power supply with purchase. Open it up and see why...no 9 volt battery could power this much circuitry for more than a few minutes! And what rube uses batteries in a pedal anyway when gigging?
Reliability
:
2
I owned this pedal exactly 2 days before the footswitch crapped out on me! Granted, it was a used pedal... but there was not a single scratch on it and absolutely no indication of a defect in the switch when I bought it. Upon opening the pedal up, there was absolutely no sign of attempted repairs. So, if you like this pedal, don't buy it used... buy two new ones at a well-discounted price (NEW, WITH WARRANTY ONLY... three years P&L, 5yr.parts only). These things usually go for about $75 online, and just use one of your old (like Dano 9.6v 200mw) power supplies.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Don't know yet. The guy I bought it from is looking into returning it for me, since he bought it new.
Overall Rating
:
5
You will not find any pedal that is so versatile and sounds so good for such a typically low, discounted price (new, generally around $75). But DO NOT BUY USED. The insides are more crowded than an engine compartment in an American Minivan. Looks like it would cost more to get it fixed than you'd save buying it new and having failures warranteed. I play a "66 Fender Jaguar, recent Jay Turser paisley Tele, Guild Asbory bass, Martin electrified acoustic, accordion, all through a Roland Cube bass amp (which has a factory coaxial speaker that sounds great for many applications). I've been playing in bands since 1965 and currently lead a middle school/high school praise band.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: USD 45 USED
Submitted 06/30/2007
at 03:43pm
by Mr. Personality
Ease of Use
:
9
I didn't get a manual with this used pedal, which was OK. Control knobs were self-explanatory. Tried different outputs: very smooth, light to deep natural tremolo from mono- jack; more intense,separated, edge-y tremolo from input 2. Both of these textures have use. Solid metal textured knobs and sturdy button pedal on/off switch.
Sound Quality
:
9
I ALSO DO NOT UNDERSTAND THE SHARP CRITICISM OF THIS PEDAL'S SOUND. I've been playing since 1964 and used a Fender SuperReverb for years. I know tremolo. MAYBE there is a slight boost in signal with using the trem effect, but I like this. Because oftentimes when I used tremolo on my Fender, I had to SLIGHTLY increase the volume to allow it to carry in the halls we played. Anyway, the increase is very slight. I have used only a power supply with this pedal, and I can say that the tremolo and vibrato can be made as soft or intense as you like, and the sound quality is impressive. The highs and lows carry well through the pedal with tremolo on or off. Less noise than any amp with built-in tremolo that I've owned. If you're into retro surf and 60's sci-fi/grade B spy movie soundtracks, you've got your effect: the vibrato feature. If you never use it, just consider it free because of this unit's price.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
This is a used pedal, and it works great. Don't know the history of it, though.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't had to deal with Marshall before.
Overall Rating
:
9
I played in The Ancestors (see theancestors.com) throughout the 60's and later played 10 years on the road with Cruis-O-Matic, so my forte is 60's one-hit-band tunes from soul to psychedelia. I now lead a middle school/high school praise band at my church. I got this pedal to fill in parts on some of the slow, soulful tunes we now play. I play a 1966 Fender Jaguar (Fiesta Red) and a Jay Turser Sino-Tele that I love (red paisley); a Martin electrified acoustic; a Yamaha SK20 analog synthesizer (all through a Roland Bass Cube amp which is the most versatile amp I've ever owned... and weighs about 30#); accordion; and a Guild Asbory Bass. But I can tell you this pedal would be equally effective in playing tunes by the Prunes (Electric, that is)! Unless it craps out on me in less than a year, I would definitely replace it.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: $AU 60 USED
Submitted 01/18/2007
at 02:40am
by Evanovitch!
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy to get good sounds. Especially if you start with the example settings and work from there.
Sound Quality
:
9
I think the Vibratrem sounds excellent. I like it a lot more than the Boss Tr-2 and find that it is most of the way to where 'boutique' trems are at. Better than some! The Vibrato effect is also very nice. Those that say the Vibrato and Tremelo sound the same are probably using the second output, which stays on tremelo when vibrato is selected. Vibrato only works on the main output.
Excellent vintage tone.
P.S. Does sound crap on batteries! Use an adaptor at all times.
Reliability
:
8
Seems bulletproof. We'll see...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Havn't had cause as yet...
Overall Rating
:
10
I love this pedal. It's a keeper. Great vintage tones at a very good price.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/27/2006
at 09:55am
by persson
Ease of Use
:
8
It's easy to figure out. Four knobs: Mode for trem or vibrato sound, speed, depth and shape.
As on every modulating effect you have to try a lot of settings to get that sound you want. Just to find out, that you need completely different settings, when that beast joins the sound of your band. But it's possible, and then it sounds damn great.
Never read the manual
Sound Quality
:
9
Great: No noise at all.
Strange: When plugging it in front of your amp, it raises the volume a little. When plugging it into your FX-loop, it eats volume a bit.
Nice: The tremolo sound is really mellow. You get nice vintage analogue sounds out of that beast. Perfect to me.
Needless: The vibrato. Who the hell needs this unusable crap?
I "only" give a 9 because of this stupid vibrato mode
Reliability
:
10
It's a Marshall. It's built like a .... you know.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
n/a
Overall Rating
:
9
I like this thing, and I don't understand, why so many people here are mad about it. This is the most vintage-sounding and still cheap Tremolo i know, does its job without any noise and is built like a tank. I would buy it again.
I give a 9 because of the volume-problem and because of the senseless vibrato mode.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: Canadien 139.07
Submitted 10/27/2006
at 09:14am
by Ryan
Ease of Use
:
10
Its easy to use, 4 knobs, Tremelo or Vibrato knob. Speed Depth and Wave Control are the other 3 knobs. Overall it's very easy to use. But you can't do anything with it that other effects do.
Sound Quality
:
2
It's a great effect, but its very unsensitive, It goes from full vibrato or tremelo to no vibrato or tremelo. It has vibrato and tremelo effects, but they both sound the same.
Reliability
:
8
It is virtually indistructable. I droped it 5ft on solid concrete, the only thing dented was the concrete. Solid Steel. For electronics its very dipendable.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
3
I play bassicly every style of music, its only good for modern rock. I have a Fender Stratocaster, and I'm using my step dads Traynor amp. Bad combination. If your stuck with it, try heavy distortion with reverb. Boss would be a better choice.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/18/2006
at 03:38pm
by Csharr2
Ease of Use
:
9
Not to difficult to use. The wave shape control can be a little tricky though.
Sound Quality
:
5
I bought his effect primarily for a choppy helicopter-type tremolo sound and I admit it does that really well. But only that. You can not possibly get a good bluesy soft trem sound out of this pedal. The Vibrato function is horrid but I have other pedals that do that so I'm not hurt by it. There is a volume boost when the effect is engaged but it doesn't bother me much. My rig is a Fender 60's reissue Strat--modded Rt.66 OD/Comp--E13 Soda Meiser--ProCo Rat--Vibratrem--EHX Flanger Hoax-- Guyatone Micro Delay--Boss Hi Band Flanger--Boss Chorus Ensemble--Line 6 Echo Park--into either Roland JC 120 or Peavy Penta 212. It is quiet and works well with other FX. It is just not versatile enough.
Reliability
:
6
It has cut out on me a few times, so I dont trust it that much. However since tremolo isn't exactly an effect I use all the time I think I could manage if it died out on me on stage.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
We'll see....
Overall Rating
:
6
I play shoegazing instrumental post-rock stuff but I also enjoy bluesy stuff too. This pedal is mediocre at best. I bought it to replace a broken Danelectro Tuna Melt Trem but it was such a let down. I may replace this eventually but I'm not sure what with.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/18/2006
at 08:17am
by Steve
Ease of Use
:
10
Fairly easy. Speed knob is obvious, as is depth. Mode switch is simple, vibrato or tremolo. Shape knob alters the type of waveform, from triangle which is subtle, to square which is a more full on warble.
Sound Quality
:
8
Not bad at all. It's better than theold Nobels TRX, but that's the only other tremolo I've owned to compare it with. The tone isn't altered and there is no drop in volume. The Vibrato mode is often slagged off, but it does what it is supposed to without any fuss. I particularly like the fact that it has 2 outputs. In tremolo mode it sounds fantastic with the signal flip-flopping between the two amps - real stereo effect.
I need to hear other pedals to make a proper comparison, but I get the feeling it lacks a certain musicality; it can sound a bit lifeless in some songs with my band.
Reliability
:
10
No problems so far and it is solid metal. Feels indestructable.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
For the price of ?35 from www.gak.com I can't complain. It does what it should at a very good price. Has gone into my pedal board straight away.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $75.00
Submitted 03/25/2006
at 06:00am
by John L G in Erin WI
Ease of Use
:
8
The pedal is slightly harder to use than the Boss version or the cheaper Dano version. There is a vibrato and tremolo mode. Rather than a simple switch for waveform choice, there is an adjustable knob that starts at triangle and adjusts to square. It takes a while to learn how to tweak your tone but the good news is that this pedal is very tweakable - lots of tone potential. I like it.
Sound Quality
:
10
I sort of talked about tone potential just above. I think that the adjustable wave shapes and the two modes make for many great sounds. I like the slight db boost. I have most of my pedals set such that there is a slight boost when the efect is heard.
I play either my USA Strat, Tele, PRS Singlecut Soapbar or PRS Santana SE into a Fender Hot Rod Deluxe or my toy amp which is a Vox AD30VT.
Reliability
:
10
I have a Marshall Compressor and a VT-1. Bulletproof pedals.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I would get the same pedal again. The Boss Tremolo sounds anemic and like Bosss pedals, it's noisey. The Danelectro pedal sounds great but it's plastic. Many of the Boutique Trems are fantastic but $300 for a Trem is too much.
This is a great pedal.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 40 (# UK pounds)
Submitted 03/24/2006
at 03:27am
by Jonny Sunshine
Ease of Use
:
7
Sound Quality
:
7
Reliability
:
5
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
5
I bought this pedal for that retro tremolo sound (think 60s spy movie)
I mainly play a Shergold through a Laney amp using clean or slightly crunchy sounds. I used to have an amp with built in tremelo and never felt the need for any other FX.
This pedal does the job, kind of. The controls are straightforward enough, it's not hard to get the right kind of sound (though I'm not after anything too radical), but I have a few reservations:
It adds about 3/4 dB of gain. The manual suggests this won't happen if you amp gain is high enough-I beg to differ. If I want to make my guitar get louder I'll turn it up.
It seems to run out of steam the longer it's on. At first I though it was just the battery running out (it seems to eat them), but I tried it with a power supply and found exactly the same. This means that I have to keep tweaking the controls and upping the depth throughout a gig, which I don't expect to happen.
One more point: the "vibrato" effect. Why?
I wouldn't think about buying this pedal again- if it was lost or stolen, I'd look for an alternative.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: #40 (UK )
Submitted 01/10/2006
at 02:36am
by Tom Collier
Email: fizerboy<at>aol dot com
Ease of Use
:
9
This is a fairly simple pedal; I have found it easy to get a massive range of sounds by tweaking the 3 knobs; mainly adjusting the speed whilst setting it to the depth. It is not difficult to think of the sound you want in your head and then adjust the pedal to your needs.
My only minor gripe with this is that I prefer switches like on Boss or Digitech pedals as I find the small buttons on this and Big Muffs are inferior.
Sound Quality
:
8
I use a telecaster in a 60 watt combo with a large pedal board full of effects. I use this in a pedal chain without using an effects loop.
There are any number of different sounds you can achieve with this pedal; you just need to set it right for what you need. Long, held chords on a slow setting sound beautifully warm and vintage. On the other hand you can achieve strange robotic effects if you choose a fast setting, vibrato with a square shape. It is a fairly versatile pedal and it could be used for bands sounding as diverse as Radiohead to Tool.
I find the Vibrato effect to be useable on some settings, for a fairly short time; possibly for intros only (unless you are in a sound-scape based band). However, it is not the best sound I have ever heard in my life.
The tremelo, however, is excelent.
Reliability
:
10
I am pretty sure I have solved the problem some people are having with it just 'dieing'. If you have it turned off, and come back to it after everything being unplugged, you switch the pedal on and it simply bypasses the signal. You will not get any tremelo or vibrato effect and it seems broken. Simply switch between the modes (T/V) and go back to the one you want to use. Voila! It is alive.
This is a strange feature and I will bet this has happened to many people. I had it there for about 2 weeks thinking it was broken.
It is built like a tank and you can trust Marshall.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
9
I play in a grunge band but I am highly infulenced by bands like Radiohead and Muse as well as the predictable Smashing Pumpkins, Pixies and Alice in Chains.
I use a lot of effect pedals and I like to incorporate differert sounds and textures to my work; as well as experimenting at home. This is a pedal to own if you want more variety in your sound (the vibrato is fairly original so it has appeal to people searching for a strange sound). In terms of comparing with other tremelos, I have only used a couple but this is a good one. Even on its own, without a comparisson, there is a warmth there that you will know sets it apart somewhat.
If I was going to change it a bit, I would possibly swap the virbrato effect for something more widely usable; or possibly just change the sound (as it is not a normal vibrato) however, work with the pedal not against it; you have this sound now see what you can do with it.
To be honest, I don't use tremelo that much in my songs, and I know it would be more useful to other people. However, even though it is not the first pedal I need, I have enjoyed it and I beleive it has some great sounds just waiting to make a track.
If it was stolen I wouldn't replace it purely because it is not essential. However, I would definetly miss it.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $39.95 used
Submitted 11/15/2005
at 05:39pm
by Habitat
Ease of Use
:
10
This is an easy to set up pedal. Mode, Speed, Depth & Shape knobs. Mode lets you choose between the tremolo or the vibrato setting, speed and depth are self explanatory. Shape is where you get to choose the kind of tremolo you like from smooth triangle wave to square pushing pulsed waves.
Sound Quality
:
10
This is the best tremolo pedal I have ever had. I have tried Boss, Voodoo Labs, Dunlop, Line 6, Behringer etc. This pedal gets classic tube tremolo sounds...
Now the vibrato is not the vibrato most people are used to. It is in fact a classica vibrato sound like the vintage amps have. I compare it to VOX type of vibrato. This effect sounds like a light tremolo with a hint of detuning...To me is very kick ass!!!
Reliability
:
10
Made of solid metal. Built like a tank...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I play rock in the vein of The Cure, Interpol etc. This pedal excells in warm tones...
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $75.00
Submitted 08/28/2005
at 12:44am
by Austen
Ease of Use
:
6
Once you figure out the trick to maximizing this pedals full potential, it's extremely easy to use. Like most most pedal it has Speed, Depth, and Shape knobs, pretty Self explanatory.
Sound Quality
:
10
When I first bought this pedal, I thought it was quite mediocre. The tones really were weak, and even though Marshall claimed this to be passive (true?) bypass, there was a 30% drop in signal when the effect was bypassed. I was pissed, and was going to return it or sell it on ebay or something. Then I decided to try using a 9 VOLT adapter instead of a battery and SHAZAM... this Pedal went from a 4 to a 10 in sound quality. If you own this pedal and haven't tried an adapter, by all means buy an adapter and give a spin. You'll be surprised!
Reliability
:
10
Built like a frickin' tank, I could probably hammer nails with this thing.
Customer Support
:
5
I have been playing guitar since 1977, and this is the very first Marshall product I have ever owned. In the 80's and 90's I used Carvin X-100B amps and loved them so much I never got a Marshall amp. But now I wouldn't mind having a handwired reissue plexi.
Overall Rating
:
9
I'll give it a 9 because of the drop in quality when using a battery, again if you own this pedal, USE A 9 VOLT ADAPTER and it's sound quality will dramtically improve!
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 78,00 (euro)
Submitted 08/21/2005
at 11:52am
by Giovanni Lanese
Ease of Use
:
8
The pedal is quite simple,three classic controls for tremolo and vibrato with the first knob selecting one of the two. In low light condition,on stage, the line on the knobs is not very visible. For the rest is ok.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use a stratocaster and a fender deville 4x10. Doesn't make noise,a true bypass system doesn't touch your sound quality;it gives just a little of high frequences when on. However for my tastes the quality is very good,it seems to play on a vintage amp!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I'm having it for a short time,I can't say more.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I 've just registered it on the marshall site,a very confortable way.
Overall Rating
:
9
You know I play rock,I like the old sound,the beatles,floyd, stones,led zeppelin but also u2 radiohead, kula shaker and hush.It is a very good pedal,you can trust!
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: ?22.50 (pounds) used
Submitted 06/18/2005
at 07:59am
by Joe
Ease of Use
:
5
not the easiest in comparison to ther stomp boxes,so that could be much better
Sound Quality
:
6
ok i found the vibrato effects useless,and the tremelo was ok but not anything special
Reliability
:
10
havent had any trouble
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
dont know
Overall Rating
:
5
not too good go out and buy a Boss TR-2 or a DOD Vibrotang anything,this is problem the worst trem and vibrato pedal around. so unless you're paying under ?20.00 quid i say its over priced
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $24.99 used
Submitted 04/18/2005
at 09:02am
by Flavio
Ease of Use
:
9
Very easy to use, just turn the knobs and find what you like
Sound Quality
:
9
I love it. I'm surprised at the bum rap this pedal is getting, I think it sounds great, and can achieve a wide range of tones. I have owned two of these, the first one died on me quite prematurely, so I was hesitant to get another, but got a really good deal. Somehow, I think my second one sounds much better and works better overall than the first one I had, must have been bad from the factory. Oh well, it lives in the midst of a huge chain of effects right now, and does exactly what I want it to do, I love it.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Well as I said, I'm a little wary, but so far so good. Its very solid, but I hope the electronics on the one I have now are more sound than the first one I owned.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
???
Overall Rating
:
9
Overall I think this pedal is being way over-criticized. It's very versitile, sounds great, and looks pretty. As long as it keeps working, I'll be very happy with it.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: #25 (sterling) used
Submitted 01/02/2005
at 06:02pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
This pedal is very simple to use. I use the tremolo side of it mainly and despite the extreme temptations, i only use it occasionally. I bought it used with no manual included, but i very rarely read manuals, prefer to experiment with it myself and see what it can do.
Sound Quality
:
10
My live set up is: PRS CE24 - Boss CS3 - Vibratrem - Boss GE7 - Boss DD3 - Boss CE2 - Boss PH3 - Marshall AVT150 half stack. As you can probably guess, this pedal lives with a lot of Boss pedals but fits in beautifully. I have not been able to replicate what this baby is capable of anywhere else and after a bit of experimenting, found a fantastic effect tip. using a crisp distortion (eg, a cranked marshall plexi)drop the volume on your guitar to about 5-6, whack the vibratrem on and belt out a single chord allowing it to fade. As the note/chord fades out, a clipping tremolo wave begins to fade in. I used this in one song and our singer began jumping around screaming "thats amazing".
Reliability
:
10
This pedal goes to every gig and gets used a lot in the studio. It has had the crap kicked out of it on many occasions but has never once let me down. Typical marshall build quiality.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Who, what?
Overall Rating
:
10
I play many different styles of music from early blues to modern hardcore and this pedal can sit in with any style what so ever. If you are thinking about getting a tremolo pedal, this is the one you want. Compared it to the Boss model and there was no competition. an awesome pedal and is at a fantastically low price
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 65 (Euro (Ireland))
Submitted 10/12/2004
at 03:04am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy to figure out. No need for manual at all. There is a mode selector for Tremolo or Vibrato....choose your mode and tweak your rate, depth and for tremolo choose the shape of your waveform. Simple stuff!!!
I have a Vox AC30TB with the exceptional vox valve tremolo and vibrato built in, however i only use the brilliant channel on the amp, so a trem pedal was the call of the day for me. To set the unit up i match the pulse time of the VT-1 tremolo with the amps slowest trem speed setting, which is still fast enough, and that is the perfect rate for all of my applications of tremolo. Then i connect back into my brilliant channel and i use the pedals tremolo when required.
Sound Quality
:
10
When i got this pedal first i was using batteries for power and i had all kinds of problems with the sound....firstly the batteries run down quickly, very very quickly, so problems with volume drop and very weak effect sounds would occur. I thought i had bought a dud or else the pedal was just crap...UNTIL, i constructed a pedal board and powered all my effects from the Boss TU-2 tuner. When this pedal is supplied with constant full power it works a treat.
I only use the tremolo effect and it cuts through lovely with a nice sparkle. It doesnt impose any tonal change only great tremolo comparible to the natural valve vox trem on the amp with the added bonus of being used on the brilliant channel.
In a previous band, i was the only guitar player so i used two marshall JCM602 amps run in sterio from this pedal (one at each side of the stage). That was an amazing setup and the pedal was fantastic for this use. Also the tremolo jumped between the two amps for an amazing tremolo effect, hopping from one side of the stage to the other. Since then i have joined another band and bought the Vox AC30 amp which is my absolute pride and joy along with some lovely telecasters. My sterio setup is sadly in the past to make way for another great guitar player in the band, but the trem still sounds great and i am a happier man with my present setup now anyway.
I run this unit after my wah and overdrive pedals, but before delay and reverb. I find effect placement is a very important thing but different people like different placements so there is no real right and wrong way....just whatever suits yourself.
The other guitar player in my band has the Boss tremolo which sounds great aswell but is not any better in sound quality than the VT-1. But with the VT-1 you have the option of sterio output and the use of a nice vibrato sound too. VT-1, is a better deal in my opinion.
Reliability
:
10
I bought mine about 4 years ago. Never let me down. Built strong and durable.
Thought at first i had a dud BUT Use power supply and not batteries for best use....no problems with good constant power supply. Good strong effect and no volume loss.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed...wouldnt bother!!!
Overall Rating
:
10
Our band plays alt. rock stuff and i use this sparingly in some songs throughout gigs, rehersals and recordings. Sounds great but tremolo is not something you want to overdo IMO!!!
It does the job for me with no hassles and i dont wish it did anything better, which makes it perfect for me.
If this went awol on me i would buy another one, wouldnt fork out big bucks for a boutique tremolo...it doesnt get enough use....anyone with a boutique tremolo pedal has way too much money or just no sense!!! Overdrives are a different ballgame!!!
Anyway i have the best tremolo ever built into my amp and this little pedal is every bit as effective.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 48 (Euros) used
Submitted 09/21/2004
at 09:28am
by Cedric Lejeune
Email: redfirebird<at>libertysurf dot fr
Ease of Use
:
9
really easy to use but it has the shape button and the Vibrato mode, so it's richer than a simple Tremolo. There might be a manual, but sincerely no use for it.
Sound Quality
:
8
At first I tried this in the Effect Loop, and it's definitely not its place even if I found it logical there. So now it's in front of the amp and it's working well. I use it for twangy sounds and warm jazzy progression both with single coils and humbuckers and it works fine. Some call it digital, I call it precise, I don't want to loose definition in complex chords just because a dorkey told a cutoff would sound analog. Maybe a LoFi HiFi knob would make everyone happy. I send it to a TS9 then to my Laney LC15R, the sound is cool. Vibrato is a great addition since I didn't buy it for this, in open tuning you can get some interesting Stones-ey sounds. Both Vibrato and tremolo with low depth values add amplitude to arpeggios, middle position on the Tele the sound is really good. Stereo setups may also be interesting but I didn't test yet. The trem is generally more nervous than what you have on a Fender kind of trem, some say more mechanical, maybe due to the traingle waveform.
Reliability
:
7
The box seems solid, we'll see...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No idea, if it breaks I'll go see my tech.
Overall Rating
:
7
I was looking for a DanO Tuna Melt, I got this one used, it does the job pretty well. The vibrato is an interesting add on, it's not the big magical thing of my sound but I really like to play with it. At this price I would certainly buy it once again. I'm not into Hi Cost vintage hardware thing, if it does the job it's OK. And it does.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 45 (Euros (55 $US)) used
Submitted 09/13/2004
at 06:09am
by KBS
Email: huevadas at gmx<dot>net
Ease of Use
:
10
Absolutely easy. Four knobs, one switch.
Sound Quality
:
9
I'm using this thing in different setups. (1) Framus Sorella -> Compressor -> Wah -> VibraTrem -> Polytone MegaBrute. (2) Strat -> Compressor -> Wah -> VibraTrem -> Phaser -> Randall RM4 Preamp -> Marshall Power Amp.
The sound I prefer is a trem sound on a rather slow setting (something I always liked in Marc Ribot's playing), and I mostly use it for clan sounds. I had compared a lot of trem pedals before buying this one. When switched on, I found this one a lot less noisy than the Ibanez sound tank, the Schaller tremolo, Electro Harmonics' "the worm" (terrible effect!) and some other pedals I don't remember. I did not note any coloring of the sound when switched off - as far as I can see, the bypass does a good job.
Soundwise, the only other pedal that came close to the sound I wanted was the Boss pedal. If you like a rather soft setting, you'll have to be very precise in using the knobs on the VibraTrem, since it has a very wide range of speed settings. I found that it was easier to use to find and fine tune a good sound on the Boss - hence a 9 for the vibra trem.
Where to place it in your effects chain? As I said, I'm using this before getting into the preamp, and I'm happy with the sound I'm getting. If I wanted a harsh stuttering distorted sound though, I think I'd place it behind the preamp.
I'd also like to comment on the volume boost: Like other reviewers, I noted a boost in volume when the VibraTrem is switched on. This is a feature that I consider a plus! When using other tremolo pedals not at home or in a music store, but playing in a band, I always got the impression that once you switch the pedal on, you can't hear the guitar as well as before. I think this lies in the nature of tremolo effects: The peak tremolo volume is exactly as loud as the unprocessed sound, and inbetween the effects obviously produces gaps, so the overall hearing impression is that the guitar is not as present. So this is what actually is pretty smart about the VibraTrem: When switched on, the peak volume is louder than the original sound, but within a band context (at least for my uses) you don't really think that it's louder. It just keeps the guitar where it was.
Reliability
:
8
I haven't had any problems with it. But as other used pointed out: I eats batteries. But once you know that you can bring enough batteries or a power supply.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
9
I got this pedal three months ago, since then I have used it frequently for both rehearsals and gigs (funk, jazz ballads, trip hop). If it got lost I'd get another one, and I wouldn't trade it for any other tremolo pedal you can get at more or less that price (I haven't tried the Fulltone or the Roger Mayer which are a lot more expensive). This is a very nice effect, with a volume boost that I found very useful. It has true bypass. And all that at a very reasonable price.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 45 (English Pounds)
Submitted 12/30/2003
at 11:32am
by Adam Throp
Email: ad2326<at>hotmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
9
Its pretty easy to use if you know what the dials mean. which the instructions tell you.and if its used, u can download them from the web.
Sound Quality
:
8
Epiphone SG G400/Squier Strat ----> Danelectro Danowah ----> Marshall Jackhammer ----> Marshall MG100DFX combo amp. i place this in the effects loop after my Rocktek CHR1 Chorus.
Theres virtually no difference in noise when you are not playing, and there is a slight volume boost when its on.i rectify this by changing the FX loop mix dial on my amp to about 2 o clock so theres a little more of the dry signal. The next point is something i MUST STRESS with this pedal. IT EATS BATTERIES MORE THAN MY MATE'S IBANEZ BASS CHORUS. and that ate a lot.basically you need to have this after your pre amp (that is it has to be in an fx loop) to sound good at any kind of volume. if you put it before distortion pedal (or between your guitar and amp) and turn the distortion up both effects will sound weak to the point you cant hear them at any high volume. keep it in your effects loop or before your distortion pedal. another thing is, DONT USE BATTERIES. use a power supply so your always getting the most you can out of it. i hardly use the tremelo except to make wierd noises, but the vibrato is VERY GOOD if you know how to use it. its a very very good effect, its just gotta be put where it wants to be
Reliability
:
9
its as hard as nails, heavy as my dad and has lasted me about 4 months now. iv never heard of one dying so i dont know how half of the reviews say they died after 2 days. maybe the batteries just ran out...........i never use any backup (rebellious am i) because i cant afford them.....yet....
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never really dealt with the company, but Jim Marshall does look like a friendly man in the manual....
Overall Rating
:
9
I play mainly rock & roll, high gain stuff, and this is great for intros and outros to songs and for rhythm licks and solos alike, just put it where it likes to be, know how to use it, and theres infinite fun to be had!
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/05/2003
at 05:17am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
easy enough!
Sound Quality
:
9
o.k listen pepole!!! you dont want the volume boost?
so place this b e f o r e your overdrive and distortion!
that is it! try using the out 2 insted of the mono out for little less subtle effect, this pedal sound subtle only with a high gain sound, it's a very good pedal if you understand the concept of effect placement!!!
Reliability
:
10
works very well since i got it (3 years)
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
didn't try them.
Overall Rating
:
9
very good , musical pedal ,you got 2 pedals in here both do a really good job!
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $86 new
Submitted 10/17/2003
at 07:22pm
by carly
Ease of Use
:
3
its easy to turn the 4 knobs!!!!
Sound Quality
:
1
i run my '80 les paul std into a fasal wah into a modded (black box) marshall blues breaker-od into a modded pro tube 50 watt laney head into an emp100 yamaha multi (in the fx loop) into a v-30 equipped fender 4x12 fender cabinet.
this effect is a piece of garbage....it a vibrato and tremelo but does niether one well.
the only good effect marshall amp ever made was the old bluesbreaker.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
dont know......ive had it for 2 hours and unhooked from my chain and will return it asap
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
it blows and really, all marshall products post 1988 do as well
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 120 (AUS)
Submitted 09/03/2003
at 11:50pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
8
It takes a bit of playing around to get the sounds you want but that's the fun. Also the knobs are too close together (a minor complaint though)
Sound Quality
:
9
Both the Tremelo and Vibrato sound very nice, not too over-powering and not too quiet. I use it with a '91 Strat and a Peavey Butcher with various floor effects and it sounds (er, sounded) great and it's not noisy. Sure it's not as good as a vintage pedal but hey, it's a hell of a lot cheaper!
Reliability
:
3
My first one died after one week. I got it fixed but then it died again after a month. This is a shame because it's a nice sounding pedal.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No need. Luckily I have friends who can fix electronic equipment.
Overall Rating
:
5
It's a nice sounding pedal and the option of Trem/Vibrato in the one pedal make it very appealing. But it is not very reliable and from reading the posts here it seems other people have experienced the same problems. A shame really...
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $50 used
Submitted 06/10/2003
at 07:22am
by Josh Morgan
Email: poshmorgan<at>hotmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
7
knobs are too close together. Speed selection is great. Wave form lacking variations. trem/vibe switch should have been a smaller slider swith. Mono output should be labeled "output 2", stereo output should be labeled "Mono".
Sound Quality
:
9
READ THIS REVIEW: I think the Mono and Stereo Outputs are mis-labeled. I NEVER use this effect in the mono jack (effect is to subtle) but in the other jack, this thing sounds AMAZING. Bypass is very effective. The waveforms are a bit limited. Square wave sounds to a bit to mechanical and not completely square ("how soon is now?" by the smiths doesnt sound quite right on this pedal) but thats my ONLY gripe. The depth and speed is great. Every depth(dry to 110% wet) and speed(slow swells to machine gun speeds) you'll ever need is accounted for. More usable speeds than a dunlop stereo trem. Tremolo sounds vintage and doesnt make too much noise. Vibrato sounds just like the tremolo with the addition of a little high end resonace and a slight pitch oscillation. I prefer the vib most of time. Really not too much difference between the two effects. Vibrato sounds more unique with my guitar's tone on "0". This will give a good Zeppelin "no quarter" vibe sound. Keep in mind that with the main output, the depth is almost nonexsistant. People that gave this pedal bad reviews for being too subtle, either used the wrong(mono) jack, or have defective pedals. This is my main reason for reviewing this pedal. People that said the danelectro is better should get off the crack rock.
Reliability
:
9
no problems yet. Seems to be buit well.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
n/a
Overall Rating
:
10
These pedals arent as sought after as boss trems so much cheaper. I think it's a best buy for $40-$50. You really cant do better for this price range. Boss will give you easier-to-turn knobs and a better sounding square wave. Dunlop has nice big knobs and nice big price tag. If you have no use for a good square wave, like most traditional players, go with the Marshall.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: # (45)
Submitted 04/03/2003
at 10:17am
by LAS
Ease of Use
:
10
Straightforward, easy to follow.
Sound Quality
:
9
Using a Fender Strat, G&l Asat classic and an SG special through a Marshall AVT 50 combo. Primarily I bought this pedal as I really liked the vintage tone and the fact that you got a vibrato and tremolo effect in one unit.....Ohh, and the price!.
Reliability
:
2
Unfortunately, I had THREE pedals die within a few months of each other. The first pedal I bought I had to take back straight away as it didn't work when I got it home. The second pedal lasted a relatively long time, five months before it went to pedal Heaven. I exchanged it for another, that lasted a weekend. When I tried one more in the shop it committed hare kare on the spot. This was the last straw, so I ended up buying a Boss TR2 instead. I am disappointed as I really liked the sound of the pedal.
Customer Support
:
10
I didn't contact Marshall for the pedal, but I have dealt with them in the past and they have been, in my experience ,really good.
Overall Rating
:
4
I mainly play pop, rock, blues and the Vibratrem when it worked fitted in very well with my other effects ( Marshall GV2,Vox Wah, Vox distortion booster and now a Boss TR2 ). Now it is discontinued I guess I will not be able to give it a fifth chance!. C'est la vie!.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $55 NEW (musicans friend)
Submitted 02/28/2003
at 02:36pm
by Sid Transer
Ease of Use
:
10
Pitch Vibrato and Tremolo in one unit...not that hard. I WANT TO CLEAR UP THE CONFUSION ABOUT THIS PEDAL SO PLEASE READ THIS REVIEW.
Sound Quality
:
9
IF YOU READ ANY REVIEW READ THIS ONE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This pedal got some really high scores and really low scores. So I brought one to see what the real deal was. By nature the pedal is suppose to be a some what a ?subtle? (not too subtle!!), ?vintage? sounding effect, I?m just stating that so you don?t buy it and give it a bad review. The reviews with the low scores complained of the effect being too subtle and of a trebly volume boost, and yes I have experienced both these problems. BUT, and a big BUT, that was when I used it with a BATTERY! Now, this was exaggerated when I used a weaker battery; BUT, and a big BUT, when I used a 9v power supply the effect sounded much, much, much, better AND NO TREBLE BOOST! So, I think that a battery can?t withstand the current draw this thing needs... Anyway, I just like to say that I think it is a great sounding effect! Thank-you for your time. ::jason::
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I don't see it breaking any time soon.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
All big companies care about is money. I would too if I had it.
Overall Rating
:
8
I like it, but there are better ones out there...it's hard to find a pitch vibrato/tremolo in one unit at this price!!! I like it!!! Crack Whores and Jelly Beans.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 170 (australian dollars)
Submitted 01/03/2003
at 07:07pm
by I Hate Overrated Expensive fashionable guitar shit.
Ease of Use
:
8
Simple. Choose your effect and use the other knobs to change speed, depth and shape. Not real easy to get a good vibrato sound out of it though, hence the 8.
Sound Quality
:
5
Tremolo. The other reviews harp on about the fact that it sounds digital blah blah blah. For those who don't have "fuck i am a pussy sensitive ears" or think that the audience is actually going to care or know better, forget about it!!! This thing is ANALOG. Besides, a tremolo simply turns the sound off, on, off in varying degrees depending on your settings. This pedal is also a STEREO pedal. All those "studiophiles" for want of a better term who think the only pedal to have is an expensive overpriced piece of crap that they only bought coz so and so has got one, check and see if your is - I doubt it. I only had one amp on hand to try this thing, so I can't comment any further on that. Tremolo = as good as any other trem that I have heard/tried.
Vibrato. Here's where this unit did not impress me. I guess the term vibrato is used to encompass a wide variety of wobbling, throbbing, shaking, sounds. I was after a mushy squashing wobble, and this thing is more of a pulsing thing. Not my cup of tea, but it might be yours. 5 out of 5 for the trem, 0 out of five for the vibrato, simply coz it is not what I was looking for.
Reliability
:
10
I have the ed-1 compressor and I could use it to stop my car from rolling. Solid metal, good quality footswitch and input/output jacks. Never had a problem.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
8
I loved the tremolo, but as I was mainly after a vibrato I couldn't but this thing. I really wanted to because the tremolo would have been an added bonus, but the vibrato was just not what I was after. It didn't sound bad, it's just not the sound that I want. I tried the Danelectro chicken salad, and it is exactly what I am after. Here is a tip. Forget about brand name, price, who else uses it and what it looks like. Don't go looking for a pedal that nails that perfect univibe sound, or a perfect MXR phase 90 sound and be disappointed when it doesn't , then jump on Harmony Central and abuse the hell out of it and dismiss it as crap. if you want THAT sound, go and buy THAT bit of (probably more expensive) crap. Expand your horizons and never never never buy a pedal coz your favourite artist uses it on a record - the amount of compressors and EQ's and other shit that the signal goes through will probably change the sound.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 40 (#)
Submitted 12/27/2002
at 02:16pm
by Matt
Ease of Use
:
10
ITS A PEDAL, it doesnt get any easier to use than this.
Sound Quality
:
8
Very good, It sounds digital, but for an effect that oscilates the level or pitch of ur playing its bound to, if it didnt it wouldnt b a very good trem/vib unit now would it? great for radiohead and for spooky sounds. of course it doesnt sound as good as a professional effect but its not quite in that sort of price range.
Reliability
:
9
I would bet my life on this thing, its metal case is hard as hell. its never given me as much as a hint of breaking. i have gig'd with this without a backup
Customer Support
:
8
never needed to deal with customer support with this baby. but i did ages ago fer an old practice amp i had and it got sorted out within a couple of days.
Overall Rating
:
9
a great pedal, i would recomend going into ur local music shop and trying one. i play anything from indie to black metal and this pedal is soo usefull (works really well on plucked clean sections)
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 40000 (Bolivares (about 30 bucks)) used
Submitted 10/22/2002
at 09:26pm
by Santiago
Ease of Use
:
8
It is very easy to use, the recomendations in the manual are nice.
Has 4 knobs, vib/trem, speed, depth, triangle or square wave. Battery acces is kinda stupid, has a big screw you have to turn with a coin or something, it's not like DOD wich have a lid you just take apart. That's the only thing that I would have changed on this pedal.
Sound Quality
:
4
I use a Fender Strat and a Fender M-80 combo amp.
This effect is absolutely weak, and in order to listen to it you have to really have a good ear.
The tremolo is ok, but in the triangle wave mode is a bit harder to notice. The vibrato is the weakest I have ever heard, the thing is that it really sounds nice but it's so fucking weak it's frustrating.
You will notice that the pedal gives you result only in certain, very limited ranges of the knobs. Well it's just shit, don't buy it. use the money to buy cables, strings or shit like that. Oh! one last thing, when you step on it, the volume boosts to the roof!.
Reliability
:
8
Well all the knobs came off after a year of use, but it never died on me. It is reliable, solid,
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt w/ them
Overall Rating
:
4
This is a beatiful pedal, but I wish that Marshall would have been more careful designing it because it has so many flaws it's sad. All I can say is don't buy this without trying it first, maybe you'll like it, and most probably you won't.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US ANYTHING IS TOO MUCH!
Submitted 04/26/2002
at 04:41pm
by Bryan
Email: bryanmichael<at>juno dot com
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
Another Follow-up to my previous two posts.
This pedal died on me after a month!!!!
This was the second one I had and they both died very quickly.
I liked the sound for a cheap pedal (39.99 new) but it dies very quickly. Junk! Junk! Junk! Junk!
so much for my previous good rating.
Reliability
:
1
Absolute Junk!! I had two of them and they both died very quickly!!!
Customer Support
:
6
Why bother-
I called them with questions, they were relatively helpful.
Overall Rating
:
1
Sounded good for cheap-but absolute junk!
Avoid at all costs! Marshall pedals are unreliable!!
Junk!-Junk!-Junk!
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $40.00 NEW
Submitted 04/18/2002
at 08:18am
by Bryan
Email: bryanmichael<at>juno dot com
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
This is a Follow-up to my original post. I really like this pedal as an accent and I think that it's swell and decay sound quite natural-I am writing because I got curious about the pedal (having read some more comments below) and wanted to know if it was indeed analog or digital-To me, it did NOT have that digital "white noise" that some pedals display and it really goes to show that you cannot tust most of these reviews on Harmony-Central to give you an honest evaluation. I contacted Marshall and they assured me that both this and the Supervibe Chorus are ANALOG pedals. No big surprise really to me, but those who have stated "this pedal sounds digital as hell" obviously don't know the difference either. We tend to associate "digital" with an excessive high frequency presence, and "analog" with a more "midrange-y" or "warm" sound. But let's not throw these words around like they mean something they don't. There are reviews on the "Supervibe" column that also state "you can get a psuedo-analog sound out of this chorus". Guess what? it is ANALOG!! You are getting a psuedo-digital sound out of it! Just because a pedal has a treble boost, doesn't mean it's Digital. I won't put the Vibratrem up there with my VooDoo Lab Trem, but it holds it's own against any competitivly priced trem pedal and it's NOT DIGITAL, it doesn't sound digital, and it doesn't respond like a digital pedal. I LIKE some digital pedals!! You cannot take my Akai Headrush digital delay away-I wouldn't trade it for an analog delay. On the VT-1 The Vibrato function being added to the trem is a BONUS and makes this pedal a must have if you have 70.00 or less to spend on a trem-in fact, at 40.00 on Musician's Friend Closeout-This is a must have anyway!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $40.00
Submitted 04/09/2002
at 03:24pm
by bryan michael
Email: bryanmichael<at>juno dot com
Ease of Use
:
8
This isn't that hard to use if you are familliar with the settings on most Tremolo Pedals, but it only really has a few good sounds trapped inside anyway...
Sound Quality
:
8
First let me state that I got this pedal at an incredible bargain ($40.00 NEW) as they are now discontinued. I tried one before and it died after 48 hours(just like the other reviewers said!) But when I stumbled on the bargain, I had to have another. I consider myself a pretty good authority on Tremolo pedals-I have owned/used the prized Boss PN-2(too mechanical and noisy), The Boss TR-2 (much more natural, compact, but a bit noisy), The Dunlop TVP-1 (The mother of all versatility and it sounds great too!) and finally my favorite, my Tremolo of Choice- The VooDoo Lab (4 knob version) which is warm, soft, musical, and absolutely the best I've heard. The Vibratrem was another animal-It is kind of mechanical in a way, but still musical. There is a sligt volume boost and treble boost when engaged, which can be a good thing-but it is definitely not "transparent" in that sense.It is a stereo pedal, which I think is an awesome feature-so that gives it an edge up. It is relatively quiet and it gives you TWO effects for the price of one. The Tremolo is pretty basic, and the knobs have a limited range of settings, but I like to use the Vibrato mode sometimes. Overall, it cannot compare to my beloved VooDoo Lab Tremolo, but at 40.00 it can't be beat. I can now have two seperate Trem settings on my pedalboard at once or set the vibrato for a leslie sound. Overall, not a high quality pedal, but for price and sheer versatility-I'd take this over the Boss.
Reliability
:
5
Construction seems very solid-If it weren't for the fact that I had one die on me....I would guess it was indestructible! But alas, the cheap electronics show through.....
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never Tried, but not hopeful......
Overall Rating
:
7
Having played so many tremolo pedals, I can say that this is not "one of the best", but I actually do like it for some applications-it's like those cheesy little effects you find and just can't part with because nothing else quite makes that sound. I'm keeping the Vibratrem-it's a stereo vibrato, a decent although somewhat mechanical tremolo- and it will live in peace side by side with my unsurpassed VooDoo Lab Tremolo as a psudeo-univibe.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $50
Submitted 03/28/2002
at 07:45am
by warthog
Ease of Use
:
9
How can a pedal be hard to use. The only complaint I have is that it's a little difficult to see your settings when standing over the pedal. When I play, I don't look at the pedal soooo, who cares!
Sound Quality
:
10
After reading these reviews, I took this pedal to my Guitar center and compared the vibrato with a 67 Quad Reverb. IT SOUNDED EXACTLY LIKE THE ORIGINAL! All those who think it doesn't should make this comparsion. It did not sound "digital" in any way. Run through the effects loop of my Fender Deluxe there is virtually no noise when I engage the pedal. Besides a slight increase in volume, I really don't see tone changes everyone describes.
Reliability
:
9
Plugged in, this pedal is no problem. I'm not sure I trust the battery power.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Who knows?
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing for 30 years and I do know tone when I hear it.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 70 (DM) used
Submitted 11/09/2001
at 02:48pm
by Bennidrall
Ease of Use
:
7
It's an easy to use stomp box. It's a little smaller than the Boss pedals so I can use it in my favourite setup with the Boss BCB 6.
The controls are not my favorite, they are too small and it's almost impossible to see where it's at. But you can feel and you can hear the different settings. Once OK, you keep it that way.
The settings are flexible enough to get a good tone.
Sound Quality
:
9
This is what it's at. I have the opportunity to own a ton of pedals. I do also have the sought after Boss VB-1 and PN-2. Compared to these it's good enough. I don't like the VB-1, I'll sell it now. The VT-1 has a very good vibratosound, much more useful than the VB-1. All the Boss tremelo's do have a certain amount of noise but the VT-1 is little bit more quiet, the Marshall is not that versatile in the tremelo mode, but it's good enough. Yes, you can pan the tremelo and the vibrato.
This I like the most. Used with a Fender de Ville 4 X 10" and a Ploytone minibrute 15" you get a thick fantastic sound.
My guitars are from Gretsch to LP's and all Fenders. With the strats you get that SRV sound.
In combination with my Boss CS-3, SD-1 and DD-5 it has pulled out the PN-2 out of the board.
I play all kinds of music, from Jazz to Jazzrock to ultimate Stratsounding Cray and Vaughan to chilling Isaac and uncle Neil sounds and not to forget Roy Buchanan and Steve Winwood (my all time heroe on guitar, hear how he beats Clapton in Blind Faith)
Reliability
:
10
These Marshall pedals are made of Stainless Steel. I cannot imagine it will break.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
In a way, I'm not a Marshall fan. I have 3 Marshall amps, a bluesbreaker, a SL mkI and a 8080. Only the Valvestate never let me down. But I think this pedal won't need any after sales support.
Overall Rating
:
9
Guitar playing is like having sex. You all have your favorite's that you'll never let go, until the moment you get a better offer. Well, in a way I do own the whole whorehouse. I don't have to choose for buying, I pick up the stomp box I like from the container with about 60 brothers and sisters. The same with guitars and amplifiers. (Rivera, Mesa Boogie, TB30 a.s.o.)
So I can compare it to it's originals. As I said already, the tremelo mode is good enough for country riffs, but the Boss PN-2 sounds better, and above that, the vintage Twin sounds even better, but it's useful.
The vibrato mode is the cream of this pedal. It beats the VB-1 on the sound.
The only trouble I found was the switch, it can be noisy sometimes. I think that's the other side of the hard bypass.
If it's lost or stolen I'll will certainly try to get another one.
I'm not a professional player, although I play quite a few hours a day. I'm normally not playing covers, I have my own songs. I perform about twice a week, most of the time on jamsessions. Then I play with the cheapest pawnshop junk you can get, (Vester Tele and a Spirit 30 Solid State amp: total costs: $ 51,-). I don't think my comrades have any notion that I own a ton of stuff. So I won't use it on these sessions. But for my studio recordings and rare own perfomances I'll certainly use it.
I get in a way inspired by this pedal. That's the best compliment for a pedal.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: AUS ($150)
Submitted 08/28/2001
at 07:37pm
by John Britten
Ease of Use
:
8
Easy to use. Knobs are sensitive, small adjustments do the job. Solid chassis.
Sound Quality
:
7
Using tele/Di Marzios-blues driver-VT1-noise gate-Marshall VS 102R. Contrary to several other reviews here I found the sounds agreeable. Slight boost to the signal chain when switched in. Best way to get pseudo-sine wave trem is with relatively sharp wave setting and fairly shallow depth. Good variety of sounds. I don't use the vibrato at all.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
7
Very satisfactory pedal and pretty good value in blues/light rock. Hope it lasts longer than some reviewed here.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 45 (pounds sterling)
Submitted 06/20/2001
at 08:45am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
Just four knobs (although one is a 2 position switch) one input, two outputs and a footswitch. Not complicated, wide sweep to the speed and depth controls
Sound Quality
:
7
There was a definate negative thinning effect on the tone, but the pedal was cheap, and its certainly good enough for playing with friends or a bit of home recording. However, this is only relevant if the pedal works...
Reliability
:
1
Stopped working within 2 days. I wasn't impressed.
Customer Support
:
1
I have emailed Marshall, but with no response. I have also written to them with no response. They have no customer service at all, and so I have decided to have no further dealings with the company.
Overall Rating
:
1
Garage rock, stuff like that. Not that the style of music I play benefits in any way from broken pedals.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 05/02/2001
at 06:55am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
4
this is an update to a previous review. I have used my vibratrem for about a year and a half now. My opinion has lessened of it considerably. Certainly its reliable, and it hasnt given me any trouble on that front, but tonally, it sounds pretty poor. The other day I was playing through a 70s Fender Vibrochamp, and I realized how nice good tremolo can sound. There was a warmth and musicality to the Fender tremolo, it could be on extreme throbbing settings and still sound "right". Whereas I have to fight to get my Vibratrem in that perfect position where it sounds "OK". I think part of it may be Fenders use a sine wave (I think) and the vibratrem on even its smoothest setting of the shape knob use a triangle wave tremolo. It sounds bad, I'll admit it. Unnatural. Its still a usable unit...but with other nicer trem units on the market, this Marshall pedal may be destined for EBay...
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 43 (UK #)
Submitted 03/01/2001
at 01:45am
by Spencer
Email: spenno at aol<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
7
PAckaged with Marshall's customary user-friendly manual and attractive design, there are lots of recommended settings. Sadly they do not help. The pedal has four switches - the 'shape' of the effect, the toggle switch between tremolo and vibrato, and effect level and rate. The switches are fiddly.
Sound Quality
:
7
I'm not too fussed with the vibrato setting, but the tremolo when it works has a reasonably warm sound through my SG and Rickenbacker 330/12. As ever the tremolo is lost behind distortion. Seems more mechanical than say, the Danelectro and Boss.
Reliability
:
3
Well, I've had two of the things, and so has a friend. His both went back within weeks of purchase. Mine, bought sadly mail order to save costs (!), have both knackered and I'm having trouble exchanging the second. The thing is, it's unpredictable: mine both konked out at random. The effect light was coming on, but even on maximum setting, nothing was coming through. This is on adaptor and battery, a pathetic excuse the shop tried to lay on me each time. Supposedly I shouldn't use a battery as they're unreliable. The second time, they said I shouldn't use an adaptor if a decent battery was inside. Right.
I would not take this to a gig and use the vastly cheaper and superior Danelectro instead.
Customer Support
:
3
Never dealt with Marshall as they'd refer me to the company I got it from - Axemail.com in England. Fair enough if the thing's started working, but it's now happened twice in less than three months and has spent more time knackered than working.
Overall Rating
:
4
When it works, it's great because of it's retro design and cheapness. The sound is fair but unspectacular, and not a patch on the Boss tremolo. But that's fair enough as the Boss is twice the price. But the Danelectro Tuna Melt is a lot less, and sounds much better. Incidentally, that pedal is very reliable and can plod on battery power for an eternity.
On sheer unreliability, and that I've known all four I've come across (bought from different locations) to go wrong, this should be avoided at all costs!
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: FRF 450
Submitted 02/05/2001
at 02:42am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
N/A
Sound Quality
:
4
Extremely harsh and brittle. This pedal sounds "digital" as Hell! It also gets in the way of your main sound. In other words, you don't feel like the tremolo/vibrato effect is part of your sound. It comes up as an additional and very annoying layer that "processes" your tone.
Still, it remains fairly affordable and almost decent in its price range.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
N/A
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
4
I expected to get a lush and warm tremolo sound for oldie stuff, say Slim Harpo style swamp blues, or SRV approved vibrato to approach that rotary speaker effect but got none of that. It might do the trick if you add thick overdrive (think Robert Ward blues/soul signature tone) but don't expect much of it anyway. The bottom line : this pedal is definitely uninspiring and its good looks are not enough to convince guys like me who view pedals as toys or cheap replacements for built-in all-tube tremolo or even dear old Leslie cabinet. I sold it back after a few weeks and got a Guyatone micro-effects tremolo instead. it still sounds somewhat "digital" but is way smoother and usable, despite its annoying volume boost.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $98
Submitted 12/27/2000
at 08:50pm
by spencer
Email: gottagop at hotmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
6
difficult to get a good sound. knobs seem to alternate between not enough sensitivity and way too much
Sound Quality
:
2
I give it a two because I'm sure something out there has to sound worse. This thing really really sucks. It doesn't have a strong tone at all. It seems to strip character from your playing. I hate this box. I used it to add tremelo to a rhodes electric piano. It really kind of boosts the treble and at the same time thins out the sound a bunch by killing the lows and mids. It is like a really bad one setting eq pedal and tremelo at the same time. And the vibrato sucks so bad it isn't worth talking about. Mind you, this is on electric piano, not guitar, but I think the effect should translate.
Reliability
:
5
mine quit after about 3 months of three times a week usage. However, other people seem to have better results. Actually the only time I liked it was after it broke. For about a month after the vibrato and tremelo functions stopped the pedal began to boost the signal very strong and clean. It was really cool actually, because that warmed up the signal before it got to the overdrive. But then that stopped as suddenly as it started and the pedal became truly utterly worthless
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
fuck them
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
do not buy this pedal unless you enjoy sounding like absolute shit. The danelectro tuna melt sounds ridiculously better than this pedal, at a fraction of the cost.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $90
Submitted 12/12/2000
at 08:27am
by Aaron
Email: fuzz_a<at>yahoo dot com
Ease of Use
:
6
In tremelo mode it's pretty easy to get a good sound. I found it difficult to get a good sound out of the vibrato mode. They all sounded the same. As with all marshall pedals however, when you try to turn one knob, its really hard not to accidentally turn another. Also, the speed and depth knobs are VERY sensitive, so when you accidentally hit it, there is a noticable change.
Sound Quality
:
5
1. My setup: Modified American std. Strat>>korg hyper distortion>>crybaby wah>>vibratrem>>fender hot rod deluxe.
2. There is a noticable volume AND treble boost when you turn the effect on. However, it doesnt color your tone when off.
3. The vibrato effect is pretty stupid. You can get a much better vibrato sound by wiggling a floating trem with your right hand while picking. Of course if you didnt have a floating trem you'd need a pedal but this one sounds too harsh.
4. The tremelo effect is ok BUT only if you dont want anything really pronounced. I had to turn the depth ALL the way up just in order to hear it. Like i said before, the speed control is too sensitive - the range is WAY too high to be usable so i was always fiddling around the 12 oclock region tryin to get just the right speed. The wave control doesnt work too well either. You basically have to turn it to either a perfect triangle or a perfect square shape to hear the effect. Anywhere in the middle and even with the depth all the way up, you simply WONT hear any tremelo at all. What a gyp!
5. Because of the sensitivity of controls and lack of depth, it was nearly impossible to get sounds like that on REM's Monster album (which is a good example of how a good tremelo should sound).
Reliability
:
9
I could depend on it. it weighs a ton and is basically solid metal. knobs are metal and feel sturdy enough
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
5
I play all sorts of styles, generally some sort of alternative/rock. Been playin about three years. If this pedal was lost or stolen i'd grieve the 90 bucks i spent on it but be happy that it was gone. The Danelectro tuna melt trem pedal sounds better than this! This thing is basically useless. Doesnt cut through the mix when playing with the band. Doesnt go deep enough. the waveform isnt flexible enough. Speed is too sensitive. Vibrato just sounds like crapo.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: $75 (Canadian)
Submitted 07/30/2000
at 12:13am
by Mike D
Email: interactiveit<at>hotmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
10
The four knobs each have a very distinct function, so getting stuck is impossible. The manual is not needed, although it provides some useful settings. It is very easy to use.
Sound Quality
:
9
My setup varies between a stock mexican strat to a Les paul Studio through the vibratrem into an old big Muff, a crybaby, then to a Fender amp. It's not a great setup, but even with the muff, it makes no hums or noises, and the true bypass is appreciated. Other comments say its too digital, and I agree, it's not "warm" like a vintage tremolo, but it's damn close. It has great sound, and a great feature was the speed and depth. Vintage Vox and other tremolos had only volume, and this makes about 8 distinct sounds for tremolo and 8 for vibrato which makes the box a great value. It sounds great too. The treble boost is very distinct on the tremolo which can be irratating, but the vibrato is silent.
Reliability
:
8
After about 3 hours of fiddling with it, the triangle sound wave failed to make a sound, but after changing the crappy green cell battery, it worked fine. So it does take up lots of batteries, but thats what a 9v adapter is for!
Customer Support
:
9
Marshall is a reliable company who makes good products. I opened this box up and saw numerous inspection signatures by several people.
Overall Rating
:
9
My playing can range from metal to rock, to heavy blues, and I ventured into classical and acoustics for a bit, and this pedal doesn't really fit my style, but it's very original and suprisingly good with the music i play. If it was stolen I would probably shop for another pedal, because i got this real cheap and it was new. The tone is not vintage, its in between that and digital, but its real nice. The last comments were very harsh, and if you think you can get a vintage sound for $80, then your pretty whack. A great pedal.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: US $89
Submitted 05/21/2000
at 09:59pm
by Nic Neufeld
Email: nicneufeld at hotmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
8
This unit is somewhat easy to use, three pots, a mode switch, and a footswitch. One is speed, one is depth, and one shape (sine wave to square wave). The mode switch looks like a pot, but is only a two way switch that lets you select vibrato or tremolo. It has a stereo output and a 9v adaptor jack. Quite frankly, as much as I like this unit, it can be hard to get the right sound out of it. It is very easy to get a precociously overdone or underdone tremolo. Perhaps the range of the pots is too great. As far as documentation goes, why on earth would you need a manual for this???
Sound Quality
:
9
I use this with my Rickenbacker bass in order to achieve a Chris Squire sound. I'm a big Yes fan. I used it the other day live with two amps for a stereo set up, lent a nice wobbly bottom end to some of our progressive songs. It sounds fine, no noise problems, true bypass, etc. I never use the vibrato...i hoped it would be a more literal vibrato. It turns out it is more of a screwy psychedelic modulating quasi-vibrato, reminding me more of a rotating speaker, chorus, or univibe. If it were a true vibrato I would use it to give a smooth sustained vibrato to my more legato parts. But the Chris Squire tremolo is there, and I love its uniqueness; I must be the only guy in my city who regularly uses tremolo on bass. All my musicians think I'm crazy, but it sounds good.
Reliability
:
10
Absolutely no problems. Nice heavy metal case.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I've had my problems getting a Marshall amp repaired, but I cant blame the company specifically for that. No rating.
Overall Rating
:
9
When I have this running, along with my Sansamp Bass Driver (for general tone) and my Fulltone Bass Drive (for overdrive) I can pretend to be Chris Squire without all those tube amps. Not that I wouldnt prefer a tube amp, but the budget doesnt allow one yet. It is so unique, I know Ive been running on about C. Squire, but this actually gives me a more individual sound and inspires more creative parts. I play in a three piece band, so I have more room to sprawl out bass parts under the guitar player. Great unit, does the job, nothing magical, but is an essential part of my rig.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 45 (Pounds Sterling)
Submitted 05/07/2000
at 04:02pm
by Graeme Duff
Email: graeme<dot>d at virgin<dot>net
Ease of Use
:
8
Pretty easy to use, it comes with a pamphlet to help you, and it also provides a few suggested settings.
Sound Quality
:
5
I play an SG special through a Crybaby-Small Stone-Big Muff-Electric Mistress-Marshall DSL. The Vibratrem gives a thin choppy sound which to me sounds pretty digital. It seems to give a slight trebble boost, and sounds quite metallic. The tone is not smooth at all, and the thing eats batteries. I'm not impressed at all.
Reliability
:
9
It seems pretty solid, but you'll be changing batteries every five minutes
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
5
I think that most people will be pretty disappointed with this. Marshall can make a lot better. It is cheap, so I guess you get what you pay for, but I really wouldn't bother buying this again. It really is not anything to get excited about.
Product: Marshall VT-1 VibraTrem
Price Paid: 480 (Francs Francais)
Submitted 02/15/2000
at 04:34am
by DOCTOR GUITAR
Email: doc dot guitar<at>caramail dot com
Ease of Use
:
9
Tres simple d'utilisation, pour peu que l'on sache comment fonctionne un vibrato ou un tremolo!
Sound Quality
:
7
Vraiment proche du son vintage des vieux ampli , tant que l'on reste a un parametrage du "speed" assez lent!
Je l'utilise sur une Fender Fat-Strat branchee sur un Peavey Bandit 112, et je suis satisfait de mon son!
Je pense qu'une Dunlop m'aurait plus convaincu!
Reliability
:
5
rien a dire, car en fait on ne s'en sert que pour des besions tres ponctuels ! En aucun cas , le VT-1 contribue a mon son!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
aucune idee
Overall Rating
:
6
Pour quelques morceaux elle me convientparfaitement, mais j'avoue pouvoir m'en passer!
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