Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/21/2009
at 11:37am
by Giorikas81
Features
:7
Cool features, not your normal little combo amp. Everybody knows them by now. Discontinued. Effectively a one channel amp. Wish it was three seperate. I use it at home. It only has enough (very little actually) power from there. The DI helps in a small rehearsal if you can operate on a single channel amp. Solid state, mosfet power amp, 10 watts, could give a satisfactory sound through a regular 4x12. Vintage 30's seem to behave pretty good though far from full range or flat that nomrally this amp would like
Sound Quality
:10
How can I write a review for such a loved amp?
two guitars mostly. Epi gothic les paul floyd rose and yamaha rgx1212s(jackson copy). Have tried many from dirt cheap to outstandingly expensive custom shop guitars. I use this amp to judge how a guitar sounds!
I don't give a .... for vintage style sounds but this little amp, wipes the floor from any line6 style modeller, or plexi pedal or whatever. Actually it is the best sounding low level amp I've heard period. If you value a sound, tube sound if you want, as the result of your picking, guitar and its pickups a preamp providing a signal, a power amp providing dist, an output transformer providing pressence through whatever trick, or sag or any other technicalities that make a tube circuit feel orgasmically good(sweet spot in a phrase) then you should add speaker distortion or even thump. And NO amp has that in low volume. But this tiny amp, has it. You can palm mute and feel and hear...thump!!! It is great. Is it a preamp thing? Is the tiny speaker that resonates in lower volume? I don't know for sure but it works!!!Great!
It has vintage growl if you crave it but can do metal very very well, not modern recto metal(never had that in mind) but metallica or ozzy type sounds. You will find yourself thinking that in certain settings it just sounds perfect. Is it all good? No. An active though very musical eq such as the -+12db that this one has can bring out some very extreme bad sounds. And through time I find that the point that the gain control balances between compression saturation and enough gain to let you riff quickly, is where the best sounds are. And lower gain levels allow you to have more treble that don't fizz!
On the clean side, it does have very good cleans fender type or marshall type. But it still is a clean that will distort and of course now headroom...In your house this thing has great dispersion: A friend could not believe the bass or how this small combo sounded so big! But it is not a TUBE clean sound rather than a warmer solid state sound. Even as such it still reacts very very good with your picking dynamics: Even better than many mediocre(in this area) tube amps. But not a TUBE clean sound...
I could go on and on for hours about how many sounds you can attain.
The one very very good hint for this is that even though hot type of gain (the middle switch) sounds great when playing alone it is very fizzy when going direct. Same goes for the EV or JBL emulation on the speaker department. Try high gain, with less gain and treble and Uk speakers when going direct. It records very very good.
All in all I should have given an 8. 9 beacuse it is not the bes amp in the world. 8 beacuse it does not have a true clean channel. Ah screw it. It is 10 points satisfactory! And that counts for me.
Reliability
:7
Should be a 10. It has the occasional in many amps effects loop jack problem. Stick a short cable if you don't use effects. It is always fine since I did it. The volume pot(master at the end) seems to not hace sound anymore at its initial travel but still opens up gradually. Also the reverb seems to be less effective over time. Maybe I got used to it or a srping is bummed. So a 7. Also it may need a service after many years of constant use. And I live in greece...Oh boy
Customer Support
:10
The perfect TEN I live in greece but andrew barta responds in a flash and even talks openly about whatever is on my mind as a question! Absoluteley perfect.
Overall Rating
:10
I bought it for 400 euros!!! It may very well be the highest price paid for this amp in its history. **** the greek ******* that wanted to profit through every amp he brought to Greece. But only shows that a) I'm impatient. b) I need a warranty. I'm usually very unlucky!!!But hey what it really shows is that c) I really really wanted this little guy.
Overall rating TEN. Can you find it for 100$?Do IT
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: USD 225
Submitted 08/09/2006
at 03:27pm
by Jeff
Features
:10
The features have been covered in detail. Basically it can mimick any single channel amp out there (for the most part) including effects and reverb. It's not loud enough to gig with unless you go direct and use it as a personal monitor, which works great. It's weird showing up with a little shoebox amp but nobody is unhappy with the sound.
Sound Quality
:10
I use it in a bunch of different settings, but if you want to hear samples of it with a ES-335 knock off (Washburn HB-35, the model with all the bells and whistles) with Duncan Phat-Cats you can check out www broadjam com/peek.
The first 2 tunes (Hey Hey and See How it Ends) are recorded direct into a hard disk. The second tune (See How it Ends) has a solo just before the 2 minute mark and you can hear how it sounds with Fulltone Fulldrive.
There's a third tune from the same session (Train) using a Guytron GT100 FV, and its weird but in my opinion the TM10 killed it. I ended up selling the Guytron and buying a pair of TM60's eventually.
Some people say it's grainy or abrasive, and it can be. But you've got to work with the controls. They are very powerful and you can dial in a great sound, or complete shit if you don't watch it.
Reliability
:10
I own the TM10, TM30 and two TM60's and have never had any problems.
Customer Support
:10
Lloyd is a god. I have called him and emailed him numerous times and never been anything other than thrilled. Once I thought I had a problem with a TM60 and sent him the chassis. He sent it back, free shipping, and told me to check my pedals. Sure enough my Fulltone Full-Drive had crapped out. But he was totally cool the whole time, and treats you with respect.
Overall Rating
:10
I have been playing for too many years, although I wish it showed in my playing! I have a couple of degrees in music, for what it's worth. I'm 42 and got tired of lugging around tube amps a few years ago. I ended up trying all the line 6 stuff, Vox etc and stumbled on Tech 21 in the process. I love how it feels like a tube amp (not exactly, but close in feel), especially with pedals. If you like your pedals in your tube amp you can plug them all into the Tech21 stuff and it's great, unlike say the Line 6 stuff. This line of products are the best out there right now.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 07/06/2006
at 03:36pm
by views
Features
:8
10W analog modelling amp. 3 Amp, speaker and gain settings. Reverb and active EQ (boosts and cuts sound).
Sound Quality
:9
Clean sounds: Clean sounds are ok but if you are looking for that crystal clear fender sound maybe you should look somewhere else. Not so much experience in this area.
Not so clean sounds: This is where the amp shines. I normally play it with amp set to british, mod to high gain and speaker to U.K. The gain is enough for 80's type metal too - debending on guitar of course - but if you looking for really brutal distortion you may need a pedal. The gain is never muddy but can get quite harsh when played in high volumes, though keeping in mind it's a 10w solidstate amp it does excellent job.
Reliability
:10
It looks very solid and no problems so far.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:10
Summary: Excellent value for money practise amp.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: EUR (299)
Submitted 04/18/2006
at 01:20am
by John
Basically three different types of sounds (Fender / Marshall / Mesa Boogie).
Fender clean: Yes, you CAN have a loud useable clean with this tiny amp. Especially with single coils. Just turn up those mids and back off the bass / treble just a tad. This renders a fairly warm sound that lends itself well to jazz-playing.
Fender high-gain / hot: Overdriven Fender sounds galore. On some guitars you need to match it with the 4x12' speaker setting, though. Otherwise it's a bit dark. It's also rather mid-heavy, so on these settings back off the mids to about 9 o'clock.
Marshall clean: Not really clean. More like a slight overdriven sound and with a hot humbucker you get quite a bit of rock'n'roll bark already at this setting.
Marshall high-gain / hot: Nice high-gain sounds covering everything from classic rock to eighties metal. Nice sustain and the amp does remain fairly hum-free even with the gain wound up. For its 10W solidstate... It gets pretty loud! For the best results, put it a bit higher up like on a chair or something.
Only dislike here is that you DO get that solidstate harshness and also the gain is not very transparent.
Mesa Boogie clean: I use this to get Robben Ford kind of sounds. Still pretty useable sounds on tap here.
Mesa Boogie high-gain / hot: Too dark and mid-heavy for me. It does the trick, but I'm not a fan.
Overall pretty good.
Reliability
:9
Very reliable. Just fire her up and she'll play for ya.
It did come with a busted reverb-tank, which seems to be a common problem. However, I don't really use reverb, so I never had it fixed.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:8
Been playing for around 17 years now. Have owned mostly Fender amps (both tube and solidstate) and now this Tech21 and a Laney.
As far as practice amps go it's pretty versatile, but I do feel there are better options out there today. Also I think it's pretty expensive for what it is. If stolen I'd probably buy a Roland Micro Cube. In fact, for the same cash I put down for this Trademark 10... I can buy a Cube 60.
Also, I'm bugged about the harshness once you turn up the volume. My V-amp2 is digital and sounds a lot more natural to me.
Overall, it's okay but I just feel it's had its time. The plethora of cheaper AND more versatile AND even giggable digital amps just render it obsolete in my books.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $150 used
Submitted 03/15/2006
at 04:21pm
by jojo
Features
:No Opinion
Bought this used as my other amp is a Peavey Vintage 2x12 and way too loud for practice. This does practice very well, and can jam with small groups. A larger jam session with other amps and it does not project well (10 watts).
Sound Quality
:No Opinion
I use it with a strat copy, single coil guitar. Reverb is good, it does distortion very well, Van Halen and Metallica presets are spot on perfect, even the amp feedback sound is perfect. My complaint is the Fender clean sound is a thin, and VERY quiet. Hard to get any punch. I agree with another reviewer, this amp was made with dirty sounds in mind.
Reliability
:No Opinion
Occasionally I will notice sound dropouts and I wonder about a loose connection. I would not want this to happen when it counted.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
n/a
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
I love its light weight compact size and XLR output. Very cool, easy to use. Would love switchable channels and more power. If it were stolen or lost I would replace it with the Trademark 30 as it is still very light and portable but enough power to be heard in a room without overtaxing this guy.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $179 NEW
Submitted 02/20/2006
at 06:39pm
by MARK
Features
:10
Loaded with featues...more than $1,000 amps. Effects loop, XLR Direct line out to PA or board, speaker extention, REVERB !! Reverb on a $200 amp is amazing. Awsome 8 inch special design speaker. It has to be magic how they can make an 8 inch speaker sound so FULL and LOW !!!
Sound Quality
:8
The marshall and fender settings with high gain are very useable, as well as the fender clean. The Mesa sound is just the Marshall with more low end. The flat speaker setting is useless except for Pink Floyd's Wish you were Here intro sound of a broken car stereo speaker. Good for Skynard, old Sabbath, classic rock and country...not a metal amp, not enough gain or low end. its a 8 inch speaker. But it sounds amazing and full of boutique tone at low volumes
Reliability
:9
Built solid and with quality
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never used it
Overall Rating
:8
Great recording or practice amp, for $200 it can be beat.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 02/16/2006
at 12:44pm
by Dr. T
Features
:9
You surely know the features by now. It is very versatile. Using the stock internal speaker, it has plenty of power for a practice/studio amp. It's not the amp's fault that no 8-inch speaker is going to get a big sound; it will always sound like an 8-inch speaker in a small box. But I suspect that if you mic the speaker cone, you'll get a much bigger sound because you'll be getting the sound from the front of the speaker instead of the sound of the box in the room. BUT...the amp has a speaker jack so you can drive any 8-ohm cabinet with it, and 10 Watts through an efficient Celestion speaker cab will produce 110 dB or more, depending on how many speakers you have in the cab. For example, 10 Watts through a 412 cab with Vintage 30s should make 116 dB, which should be fine for a lot of gigs. But the best part is that you get a big, full sound when you use an external cab. So, it's a nice portable amp head with a built-in speaker for low-volume playing, and it sounds good through headphones for late-nite practice.
The biggest limitation as a gig amp is that it has only one channel, and a two-channel amp with a channel-selecting footswitch is desirable playing with a band.
Sound Quality
:9
I use it for a wide variety of sounds with a variety of guitars. Like most amps, it takes a while to figure out the tone controls. But a wide range of sounds is available. I wish it had more compression and sustain in the Fender sounds, but with an outboard compressor (I recommend the Barber Tone Press!!!), it sounds fine.
The tone controls are an active 3-band equalizer, and small adjustments to the knobs produce large changes in the tone. So, you have to use them differently from many amps where you have to turn the knob a half-turn to get any perceptible change. Here, a very small difference in one of the knobs can make or break your sound. But I think this is fine, because with care, you can get a variety of great sounds. Try playing while you rotate each of the knobs, to hear what they do, and you'll have a versatile tool.
Reliability
:9
I had to send the first couple of amps back to get one with working reverb, but I've had no problems with the third one after a few years of playing mostly at home. So, I'll give it a 9, but it's continuing to work and it has a well-made feel. Actually, it looks beautiful and feels like a solid piece of gear.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
I've had no experience with this, but the company has a good reputation.
Overall Rating
:10
Been playing over 40 years. I have many guitars, amps, and stomp boxes. My satisfaction with this amp and most of my amps went up 100% when I got a Barber Tone Press compressor = easy to use and the best sounds I've gotten yet. This is an update to an earlier review, which I am submitting because I have more experience with the amp now, and I like it better.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: 830 (SEK (Sweden)) used
Submitted 01/24/2006
at 04:34am
by Carl, Gothenburg
Features
:9
Bought the amp used at a pawnshop auction. Probably a few years old. I bought it to have a bedroom amp at home, works great with and without headphones.
There's a lot more rock (overdriven sounds) in this box than I really use. But I find it very versatile in dialing in fine crunch and clean sounds with just a bit of break-up. And it's nice to have those heavier sounds available (at low volumes!)
My style of music (soul, altcountry, pop, folk). It's not as crystal clear as an old Fender tube amp. But still really good.
Sound Quality
:9
1962 Guild archtop CE-100DP (ES-175 body, two P90 pickups)
Gibson Les Paul Standard
I like it a lot, but it isn't a tube amp.
Reliability
:10
No reason to doubt it. Seems wellbuilt, and now I have even opened it up - the inside looked clean and well organised for an untrained eye.
Customer Support
:10
I bought this amp cheap and used at a pawn shop auction. Turned out its red pilot lamp was broken. I emailed Tech21 asking for how to replace it - and they sent me (overseas - all the way to Sweden) a new lamp+wires with detailed instructions on how to do it. I changed the lamp in five minutes. Didn't charge me anything - though the postage alone costed 2.55 bucks.
Before asking about the lamp I also contacted Tech21 about the manual being available as PDF - I got it sent to me the same day.
Great to know here's a company taking pride in its products and its reputation. I might not go to the pawn shops to buy Tech 21 gear in the future ;-)
Overall Rating
:10
Intermediate player. Got a few guitars, 14 pedals. My next amp though will probably be one of the chinese VOX AC-30 reissues. Real tubes, tremolo, volume.
For my purpose and the deal I got I give the Trademark 10 a 10! It is a great bargain. Small, versatile (headphone jack, fx loop, modelling, real spring reverb and really good overdrive), and it's goodlooking (!) - a better home amp for me is yet to be made.
I wouldn't hesitate to buy it again.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/10/2005
at 12:30pm
by Brad Deen
Features
:No Opinion
Just an update to my review from 2004.
Sound Quality
:No Opinion
To combat the slightly wimpy sound of the Fender (Calif.) clean setting, I run my guitar (Strat copy w/single coils) through a Boss Blues Driver. I turn up the stomp box's Level control and keep the Gain control pretty low. I get lots of sparkly clean tone without distortion. I'm sure any comparable distortion pedal will produce similar results.
I'm sure many of you will ask, why bother with an amp whose basic clean sound requires you to augment the guitar's signal with a stomp box? Well, it's all about compromise. This amp has many wonderful features with one serious flaw -- the dropoff in tone and output in its clean Fender setting. With the stomp box setup, you get the amp's good sounds -- plus its portability, versatility, actual spring reverb, etc. -- while mitigating (if not eliminating) the bad. I'll take that every time.
Reliability
:8
Reverb tank died after about six months. So I did what several other reviewers on this site have done: e-mailed Tech 21. They answered within a day. Told me how to diagnose the problem, how to order a replacement tank and how to install. All for the low, low price of $24.50 counting shipping. Operators are standing by!!! (Sorry, got a little carried away.)
Judging by the number of reviewers who've mentioned having to replace these tanks, this must be a fairly common problem with Trademark series amps. I don't know if it's a quality control issue with Tech 21 or Accutronics. But the new tank has worked fine for the past 9 months. Even if I had to replace the tank every year or two at $25 a pop, it would still be less trouble than having to replace those freaking little bulbs of glowing glass (matched, of course, and possibly requiring a bias adjustment) every 6 months (if you gig).
I bought this jewel for $200. Now I'm in for $225. It's still the best buy I've ever made for musical gear. How I wish there'd been something like this 25 years ago!
Customer Support
:10
Having the reverb tank fizzle out asctually impressed me more with Tech 21. They kept me from regretting that I had bought their product. And they didn't seem as though they were going out of their way to make the amp right -- as if polite, prompt customer service were the norm for them. Score one for professionalism!
Overall Rating
:10
I still believe the Trademark 10 is the best practice/personal amp on the market. It's got great tones (use the distortion pedal trick for cleans) even at low volumes, incredible versatility, small size and light weight, yet it still is loud enough to arouse your sleeping neighbors. I don't use the direct outs for phones and recording, but they're there for those who do need such features.
I'd buy it again if something happened (stolen or more than reverb tank going kaput). But would I have to pick one up from Ebay? Musician's Friend and Music 123 both list the Trademark 10 as discontinued, although the Tech 21 site still describes it as an available product.
Maybe I should just buy a spare -- not because I'm worried about mine crapping out, but because in a few years guitarists will realize just how good these amps are. And the used market prices will explode.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $135 used
Submitted 11/07/2005
at 07:41pm
by scott welker
Email: scott dot welker<at>gmail dot com
Features
:9
- Do you know what year the amp was made in? 2004
- Is the amp versatile enough for you and the styles of music you play? Oh yeah!
- What are those styles? Blues, rock blues, and rock
- How many channels? 1
- Does it have channel switching? No
- Effects loops? Yes
- Headphone jack? Yes
- What features do you wish it had? Pretty darn happy the way it is.
- Why? Simple, versatile, with great tones
- Are there features you never use? Haven't used the mic out yet.
- Where do you use this amp? Home, practice, small gigs
- Does it have enough power for you? Surprisingly loud for 10 watts! Blew away my Vox Brian May Special.
Sound Quality
:9
- What guitar and pickup styles are you using it with? P-90s, Tele singles, PAFs
- How does it suit your music style (and what is that style)? Blues, Rock Blues
- Is it noisy? Not really
- What kind of sounds can the amp make? Great, overdriven Fender Tweed sounds; Great Marshall Sounds; Great Mesa Boogies Sounds
- How much variety? Lots
- Is the clean channel distorted at high volumes? Not a super loud clean amp, but what do you expect for an otherwise great sounding, warm little 10 watt amp with 8" speaker!
- How brutal is the distortion? Great singing overdrive and distortion.
Reliability
:9
Only had the amp for a few days, but seems to be really well built. Bought used in near mint condition. Previous owner had no problems and no signs of issues so far.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Haven't contacted Tech 21 for anything...so don't know.
Overall Rating
:9
I've been playing over 20 years and was just floored when I found this little dream at Guitar X in Denver. For $135 it was a no brainer to take this thing home and retire my Vox Brian May Special. Has more balls, more volume, more warmth, more versatility and simply great tones for blues to rock. Covers Clapton territory from Cream, to his country blues in the 70s to his recent reunion. Also does great at Gary Moore and Santana tones. Love it.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 10/19/2005
at 05:31am
by Dave
Email: DeannandDave<at>aol dot com
Features
:10
Lots of very useful features...This is just a post to get my e-mail address at the bottom of all this. Just in case anyone has any questions about the 10 inch speeker upgrade. I clicked to send the post before I realised I forgot the address.
Sound Quality
:10
Better for sure with the 10 inch speeker.
Reliability
:8
In the beginning my amp was cutting out a lot, over time it seems to have gotten over it.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
No idea
Overall Rating
:9
I'll give it a 9 simply because it is not a tube amp with (the feel.) although it feels better with the larger speeker. For some unknown reason I feel that the 5 pound magnet on the new speeker pulls the notes in quicker giving a more tube like response. It makes the reverb sound a bit deeper too which I like a lot. I also replaced the back panel with a much larger and (twice as thick) panel, screwed in from the sides, this projects more forward sound. My amp is quite a bit heavier than it was stock but I like it's more robust feel. This amp also needs to be lifted off the floor and tilted slightly back to really hear its potential. An amp stand is reccommended.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: 200 (#)
Submitted 10/17/2005
at 08:03am
by Mark
Features
:9
This little amp has a lot of features. It has 3 different amp, gain and speaker sttings, roughly based on 3 amp sounds (fender, marshal and MesaBoogie). It has real spring reverb, and most importantly for me, an FX loop. This is unusal in such a small amp, and was the thing that made me get one. I also like the EQ on it. As it is an active EQ (with cut and boost, instead of a passive EQ which will only cut) you can really vary your sound.
It is a really flexible amp which can produce a wide range of sounds from nearly clean (more about that later) to high gain OD.
This is, in my opinion, just a practice amp. I know it is intended for recording too, but I don't think it has a good enough sound quality for recording.
Sound Quality
:8
I use this amp with a USA Fender Strat and a Gibson Xplorer Pro, and a load of pedals.
I really like this amp as it is great at low volumes and, for a solid state amp, has a nice warm tone.
There are a couple of things I don't like so much. It doesn't really do clean properly. It sounds OK on with single coils but with humbuckers it just can't do clean at all, and this is on the Fender-type setting. On the Marshall and Boogie settings it wont go clean even with single coils. This is a bit anoying but for the most part I am running fuzz and distortion boxes into it anyway.
Having said that, the distortion is very nice, I like the Boogie setting with the gain all the way up! I get the feeling they designed the amp with distortion in mind, rather than clean.
Reliability
:7
Erm. Its OK. I know they have a good reputation, its just that mine is a bit flakey - sometimes it stops working, and then I turn the mid range knob a little and it crackles back to life. Also the first one I got I had to send back because the reverb unit was broken.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
This is a great little practice amp for those who need low voume, versatility and reasonably good sound quality. For the money and the convenience I don't think you can do much better - I have tried a lot of solid state practice amps and for me this is the best. I found that this was the only amp in its class with an FX loop, nice warm tone and low wattage. I tried to find a low wattage valve amp to use at home, but the ones I found that were quiet enough did not have the FX loop.
Over all I would have to give it 9. Well worth it.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 10/13/2005
at 03:02am
by Jens
Features
:No Opinion
2005 model. See other reviews; this is only an important piece of information: For all of you who think that this amp ist not as warm and vintage-sounding as you thought it would be, but a little cold and tight, try pure nickel wound strings like Fender 150s instead of your nickel plated steel wound strings. Here, the sound change is DRAMATIC; the amp suddenly produces all the sounds you have so far only heard on your favorite records.
Sound Quality
:No Opinion
Reliability
:No Opinion
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 10/09/2005
at 07:56am
by Dave
Email: DeannandDave<at>aol dot com
Features
:9
You all know the features, lets move on!
Sound Quality
:10
I have had this little amp for a few years now and while I was very impressed with it when it was new it was not long before I lost interest in it, mostly due to the small speeker and the lack of tube feel. Well instead of throwing it away I decided to mod it a little just in the way of a 10 inch speeker, hoping to give it one last chance before selling it. It has been sitting idle for about 2 years now. My main amp is a Genz Benz El'Diablo C60 combo, I also have a bunch of amp modellers. Well,the 10 inch speeker project was completed last week and to my surprise it was a complete success! This little amp has come to life now! I will not be getting rid of it. I now deem it worthy to record with. It sounds slightly different in a good way, it also sounds bigger and the best part about it is it feels better, maybe not quite 100% like my El'Diablo but it's 95% there. The 10 inch speeker upgrade is the greatest thing for this amp! I am astounded now each time I turn it on, it' a little monster all packaged in a very small package. How did I pull this off? well, for one thing .. I didn't care what happened to the amp so it did not matter if I destroyed it, I would have thrown it out. I went to Carvin ( which is very near by ) and purchased one of their 10 inch 200 watt multi purpose speekers. (It has a 5 pound magnet) (works for both guitar and bass) this was about 60 bucks. I then busted out the rear panel on the TM10 and chucked it out. I then took the reverb unit out then I took the main head unit out. I then took the front grill off. I then traced around the new speeker (from the inside) I then hacked out the larger hole, drilled new holes, purchased new washers, screws and bolts and put the new speeker in. The new speeker is installed from inside the cabinet as opposed to the old speeker being installed from the outside. I then had to cut a large U shape out of the actuel head unit to fit around the larger speeker at the top. I then had to get 2 clip extensions for the speeker wires (the speeker terminals on the old speeker at the top but on the new speeker they are on the bottom.) I put the grill back on plugged the cord back in, turned it on and BAM! Any pro would love to have this amp now for playing, practice or recording.
Reliability
:No Opinion
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:10
It's a 10 ( with the speeker mod ) If anyone has any detailed questions about doing this I'm posting my E mail address.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: $350 (CDN)
Submitted 07/31/2005
at 02:56pm
by R.J.
Features
:10
New (2005? 2004?) Trademark 10. This amp has just been discontinued by Tech 21, so if you want one, pick it up soon. Versatile little "1-channel" amp. Three "model"-type control switches, each with 3 positions. First pick amp "tweed, british, california" = fender, marshall, mesa. Then pick style: clean, high gain, or extra hot. Finally, speaker: US, UK, or flat (no speaker modelling). Essential the amp version of the Tech 21 GT2 SansAmp pedal. Also has drive, level, reverb controls and 3-band EQ. Real accutronics spring 'verb, 10" speaker, SansAmp XLR line-out with ground-lift. FX loop. Tonnes of options here.
Sound Quality
:9
This amp is certainly aiming to be the "jack-of-all-trades" amp. It can be geared for basically any sound, dial in verb, can run line out for recording or PA live use. This is a serious line out, not one of those silly little "afterthought" line-outs that so many amps coem with these days. This amp sounds great for what it is. It's essentially a GREAT little practice/bar gig/demo recording amp. Nail the gist of any tone easily, but not quite the tone itself, of course. Jam with it, use it to record song ideas real quick, etc. If you sit down with it, can get some pretty good sounds, especially leads. Biggest problem is actually response. Tech 21 gear seems to get the "sounds" pretty well on the tube amp thing, but nothing except the real deal will yield that tube response . . . Sounds like a tube amp, but doensn't really feel like one . . . I'll give it a '9' for sound, taken in the context of how I use it. If "feel/response" were a category, it would get 6-7.
Reliability
:10
No tubes! Looks pretty tough, company has good rep. Light! Seems like a cool little box. Carried it around in a backpack a few times, which most amps would not be exceptionally happy with. Never even heard of one failing either.
Customer Support
:10
Talked to them before about a pedal, and about the power transformers on their Trademark 60. Good people to deal with. Fast responses, and very knowledgable.
Overall Rating
:10
This amp is a great little box. It doesn't have the response of tube amps, but not a single one of the modellers/solid-state amps out there that I've played has it either. It does however, have a very diverse and usable bunch of disinctly tube-like sounds. Easy to dial-in. Durable, light, compact. IMHO, this is the amp gigging musicians use when they're not out with their big tube amps. In comparison, little tube amps are fairly pricey, and still need to be relatively loud quite often to sound good. No fragile tubes, and can nail the high-gain sounds that the little tube-tykes often can't. Way easier to use than most of the Line 6, Digitech, etc stuff. Just try it and see what you think for yourself.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: EUR (295)
Submitted 06/27/2005
at 03:49am
by Anonymous
Features
:10
Okay, for features I gotta give it a "10". Why? Well, this is only a 10-watt practice amp, but it's got three amp types, three speaker types and three gain types to choose from. Plus reverb. Plus FX-loop, plus speaker-out. What more could you wish for?
Sound Quality
:7
Here's the deal. I bought this thing about a year ago and I went through a honeymoon period. Honeymoon's over and... Yes, it sounds very convincing... For a practice amp. And that's just what it is.
Except... I've gone back to using a good clean amp with a good OD in front of it.
But as for the TM10:
Fender sounds: OK, not fantastic. Clean is just that: OK. Overdriven Fender sounds are OK, but in the long run still not very convincing. I get a MUCH nicer Fender tone through my Laney TF200 with a FullDrive2 in front of it.
Marshall sounds (played with an SG): Better than the Fender sounds AND the bass-notes have quite a thump for palm-muting. However... If I plug my SG into a Marshall Guv'nor into a clean Laney TF200, again it's MUCH nicer. Much more of that typical Marshall rock "bark".
Mesa/Boogie sounds: quite OK for high-gain Santana-type leads, but a bit too "dark" for metal.
So here's a summary:
Plus points: versatile, quite "punchy" for such a small speaker, user-friendly, good build quality.
Minus: no real clean sounds. Plus overall the sounds have sort of a nasally mid-range you can't seem to get rid of.
Overall: 7/10
I find that in all cases it has this nasally mid-range that you just can't get rid of.
Reliability
:9
Looks well built. No problems so far.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:7
Been playing for about 16 years. Had a variety of Fender amps and Laneys.
If this was stolen, I'd buy something else.
Purely as a recording tool, I like my V-amp2 better. As an amp... Maybe it would sound better through a bigger speaker or maybe a 4x12 cabinet.
I've gone back to my Laney as my main amp. I've come to really love its clean sound and it's also very open to receiving pedals. Depending on what I'm playing I'll put a Fulldrive2, Marshall Guv'nor or an MXR Dist+ in front of it. Much more satisfying sounds to my ears.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $250
Submitted 06/21/2005
at 01:26pm
by Wayne Famous
Features
:10
See the excellent Tech 21 website for stats and list of features. You've got 9 choices between amp, mod, and speaker. Line up any 3, and fiddle with the drive, level, tone, and reverb. It's not infinite, but there's a lot of tones here. This is, in my opinion, a recording amp in the truest sense. It is designed for studio use, either miked or direct, and as such, it's a terriffic tool. The headphone jack, the ground lift, he speaker disconnect, all are features that any home studio amp should have. Add the SansAmp DI built-in , and you've got a lot happening here. For live work, I would choose something different and put stompboxes in front of it. Buy this for its intended purpose, and I think you'll be happy. Think about your recording experiences: usually, you mic a nice tube amp and run it into the board, right? Then what? Then you compress it, add delay, pan it, maybe put it through a limiter, flange, whatever...you essentially take that tube tone and tweak it either digitally or analogally (?) until it fits the song. So in a way, this amp sort of cuts to the chase. Oh, and you can pretty much keep the overdrive/distortion pedals in the closet from now on.
Sound Quality
:9
Seems to have a lot on the menu, although chimey, bell-like, tons-of-headroom-Fender isn't really represented here. Again, for recording purposes, I usually go direct for those sorts of clean tones anyway, maybe adding some compression for that "sparkle." So this amp does almost everything but that. I love the Billy F. Gibbons sound of those pinched harmonic whistles that this thing can do all day (and at whisper-quiet levels, I might add). It can do a decent weeping violin thing if you're into it, but mostly I like the combo of California/HiGain/UK for general-purpose rock. Adjust the drive and it cleans up a bit for blues; or better yet, use your guitar's volume pot. I play a US Tele with Custom Shop Texas Specials, and so metal isn't really an option for me anyway. So unless you're hell-bent on either extreme (crystal clean or scooped metal mayhem), I'd be very surprised if you didn't find several sounds that will make you happy. And don't just listen to this thing in isolation, either -- track it with the full complement of instruments and marvel at how well the guitar settles into the mix. That's what it does -- it records.
Reliability
:No Opinion
US made! Noo Yawk City! These guys have a reputation that most other companies would kill to have. Too new for me to comment here, but I'm not worried in the least.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
See above.
Overall Rating
:10
Again, I bought this for one thing: recording. I had a very nice borderline boutique amp that was also billed as a recording amp. I won't tell you it's name, but it was 5 watts, class A, all-tube, hand wired, point-to-point, made by a huge and famous guitar manufacturer once based in Kalamazoo, Michigan. It sounded awesome, as long as you cranked it. Problem was, it was too G.D. loud for in-home use at that level, and thus difficult to record. It had one channel. Hell, it had one knob! So it really did one thing - and it did it very well - but with no direct out and no headphone jack, you HAD to hang a mic in front of it, and to get "that" tone, you had to scorch the walls with volume. So, blasphemous as this may be, I went to my local dealer and sold them the Gibson GA5 (oops!) and picked up the Trademark 10. "Fool!" you're howling. "How could you DO that?" Well, my friends, if what you're using isn't doing the job you need it to do, get something that will. Life is too short to spend hours fiddling with knobs. mics, and preamps trying to get a sound. At one point I put the tube amp in the closet with a bunch of blankets, trying to get that crunchy break-up sound without waking my kids, placing a mic inside the closet with it ---how ridiculous is that?? The Tech 21 gives me the tones I want, at ANY volume; for late night tracking, it does it with NO volume, thanks to the XLR DI. No tubes? I defy you to listen to someone play this amp and determine if it has any little glowing glass bottles inside (no peeking, now). And once this gets in the mix, no one but you is going to know you used transistors. And by all means, compare this side by side to whatever Line 6 is offering -- this is, by far, a steal. Oh, and did I mention that this is a recording amp?
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $249
Submitted 05/28/2005
at 12:06pm
by Joe
Features
:10
This is for a 2003 model, absolutely packed with features. This is definitely the main selling point of this amp, the ability to match different amps to different cabs all at the flick of a switch. This is a solid-state affair, with an apparent tube-like feel.
Sound Quality
:5
I play rock'n'roll with a '94 Fernandes Telecopy with stock pickups. I'm basically looking for a bluesy Fender crunch suitable for 60s soul and rock'n'roll and a nice overdrive bite for Ramones/Flamin' Groovies-type music.
I was expecting exactly what almost every single review up here says: "WOW!! I was BLOWN AWAY by the tube tone!!"
Nope. Though this amp is great for a beginner, it still doesn't have a proper tube feel. The sound is intermittently passable, but ultimately doesn't cut it. Why would someone spend $250 on this thing at Sam Ash when you can get an excellent small tube amp like a Fender Champ for $50 more on eBay? It's a bit of a shame that manufacturers are concentrating more and more on tons of features instead of focusing on getting one thing (tone) right. However, this thing still blows away any of that Line 6 garbage.
All in all, a great amp for a beginner, but once you actually play out of a good tube amp, you'll wonder how you could have regarded this thing so highly.
Reliability
:10
Solid as a tank. I've dropped this thing pretty hard to no ill effect.
Customer Support
:9
Though I'm not nuts about the sounds out of it, I have to admit that the company is the business. Their website is top notch and I'm sure I'd have no problem getting in touch with them.
Overall Rating
:5
Overall, a passable practice amp, very good looking and reliable but I don't think it quite nails the tones I'mlooking for. If you want tube sounds, buy a tube amp.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $135 used
Submitted 04/12/2005
at 11:41am
by jhdvorsky
Features
:10
Modeling amp that has a warm analog -tube sound. Three amp settings: Cali (Mesa Boogie), Britsh, and Tweed (Fender). Three gain settings: Clean, High Gain, and Hot. Three Speaker settings: US, UK and Flat. Low, Mid and High equalizer, reverb and level. "Solid state with a tube feel". I mainly use this amp at home, I'm a new guitar player and it's plenty loud to rattle the windows.
Sound Quality
:10
I'm using it with a MIM Strat w/ stock single coils. I'm learning to play blues and this amp allows me to get many blues sounds and a little heavier stuff to miss it up a bit. Thsi amp will play down right sopt on SRV and by adjusting a few switches you can get some high distortion rock sounds to mellow jazz and ok clean stuff to. I tested and tryed many "modeling" effects amps before ending up with this one. The all seemed to have a flat digital sound. I think the analog circuitry helps bring it closer to a tube sound.
Reliability
:8
All I know so far the reverb tank was broken when I got it. I bought it off ebay and it was 2 years old. Other than that it seems to be in graet shape considering it was sshipped across the US a few times.
Customer Support
:10
I emailed Tech21 about the reverb not working and they told me how to diagnose it.(unplug the red RCA cable leadng into the tank and turn the reverb and level up, touch the end and if it hums then the tanks is bad, if no hum it's a circuit board problem). They told me to call and order a new tank ($18.50+$6shipping). This was all in a matter of two days. great customer service!
Overall Rating
:10
I haven't been playing long, but I've had friends that have been playing for years plug in, and they were suprised and the tube sound this little amp puts out.
If stolen or lost, I'd probably by another, unless insurance gives me enough for a Fender Blues Jr. and about four pedals.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: 230 (GBP)
Submitted 02/22/2005
at 07:00am
by Rob
Email: robsredrevenge<at>yahoo dot com
Features
:9
As others put below.
More features than any one-channel amp in its' class I've ever seen.
Sound Quality
:10
Used with Fender HSS Strats.
Incredible variety. Does good Fender, Marshall sounds, Boogie is good enough for me- I do play some Santana style lead, and it covers the base well.
The amp is worth the price for the Fender tone alone. Cheaper and more versatile than a valve Fender, and less flabby on extreme settings.
No harshness, very responsive, the warmest overall tone I ever heard from a solid state amp; in fact it beats some valve amps.
This is the only small amp I will now use!
Admittedly there's no channel-switching so you have to set up one good sound for any particular song if you're using it live, and control the dynamics/ gain with your guitar controls. Luckily, this is what I do anyway, it's my style of playing and comes with experience.
I disagree that it doesn't do clean, though it may break up slightly early for some people's taste. Not mine. I can get clean, and I actually like the harmonic overtones in the clean [tweed clean] sound.
I recently used it at its' first few gigs; sometimes miked up, sometimes DI into PA.
Other pro and semi-pro players in the audience were astonished at the quality of tone I had. I had to hand it to the amp.
Note this amp really does respond, and it sounds at its' best with a high quality guitar.
At it's size and price, in it's range, there's nothing to touch it if you want a really accomplished all-rounder.
Be aware that a large part of any guitarists' tone is in the fingers. This amp accentuates that, just like a valve amp;- responds to how hard and it what way you pick the strings. You can't just slate an amp if you're simply a bad or rough player, because your argument is therefore nullified, and you won't sound professional through anything.
You can find your sound with this amp by experimenting with the controls. Set it right [and play right!] and you can have any-era Clapton, any Knopfler, good general Santana tone, clean country, or edge-of-breakup blues, and beyond. Works for heavier tones and scooped-mid too. The only reason some may not like it's tone per se, is if they're looking for some ultra-modern, very specialised tone, such as maybe a particular thrash/death tone that some current metal or industrial bands have. That said, it does do a nice Metallica impression, with the right guitar and accessories; but I'm not a thrash player.
Reliability
:No Opinion
No problems as yet; I dunno if there'll be in future, but being solid-state I hope there won't be.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Not contacted them as yet, as US warranties are more tricky to deal with in the UK, but I might email them sometime.
Heard the're approachable and good to deal with.
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
In it's range, absolutely nothing to touch it.
I've played 20 years.
I love its' general sound, it's stunning.
It would benefit from two channels live, but that would increase its' price, size and complexity. Anyway, it's mostly used by pros in the studio; I happen to use it live too, because of it's portability, tone and DI ability. I happen to be a straight-into-the-amp lead guitarist, relying on my improvisational skills a lot, and no frills like effects, etc.
Just a GOOD guitar, a GOOD solid, tubey tone from this amp, and good playing feel, will make you sound as pro as you like.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: 330 (?)
Submitted 02/14/2005
at 10:08am
by Hans Schiller
Features
:7
Built an bought in 2003, 330 ? new, local dealer
I think Trademark 10 is well known. solid-state, analog circuit, one input, 3 amp-styles (tweed, britisch, california,), three gain-modes (clean=means stock-amp, high gain, hot), three styles of speaker (flat=8inch built in speaker, UK, US). Headphone, direct-out, seriell effects loop. Reverb, 10 Watts.
Bought it to play at home in living room at really low level.
It does it well, very versatile, mostly I do use the tweed amp style and do change gain-modes and speakers. The other styles I don't like very much.
Rating: 7 when 10 ist excellent or perfect (lack of Blues-Sounds). Should have a foot-switch for mode changing.
Sound Quality
:7
I only play at home sometimes with friends, so I cannot review how the amp works in professional situations.
Play it with Les Paul studio and Telecaster classic MIM.
Very rich and full clean sounds, at low level too. Buut there is a lack of good and different blues-sounds, my favorite music-style. Tweed-style rather has no overdrive, none with the Telecaster, a littler with Les Paul. High gain mode delievers overdrive, but less variety. The other amp-styles do go in to distortion early. I don't know whether this ist good sound.
Much better than the sound of the combo ist the sound of the direct-out based on the GT 2 from TEch 21 played through a good hifi-stereo. Very silky sound. Warm and dynamically.
Reliability
:6
Reverb did not work well from the beginning. After one year the dealer changed it, without costs for me. Dealers warranty not tech 21 warranty.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
See above
Overall Rating
:7
Do playing about 10 years. If it would lost, would by another amp, not because this one is bad, but to try another one. I like the clean sound at low level, but I miss the bluesy sounds, which a fender blues junior deliever. It looks good in the living room.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: $600+ (Aust)
Submitted 01/29/2005
at 08:45pm
by Anonymous
Features
:7
The features have been well covered below and if you're confused go to their website.
I bought this amp approx 12 months ago after reading the reviews here at Harmony Central. I use the amp purely for home recording (Sonar 3) and playing. As has been emphasised on a regular basis by others here, and must be clearly understood,this is a practice amp!! Not a 100w combo.
However, it does not have channel switching (not that hard surely???), and the volume is grossly inadequate on the "clean" setting which is a major blunder on the part of Tech 21. All it needed was an extra 5 watts.
Although the low volume on clean is not a problem with recording, it is during practice. For that reason and a lack of channel switching, I will have to give it a 7.
Sound Quality
:9
I've played various guitars through the unit and it meets all my requirements. When I'm messing about it's the blues, but home recording is more pop/rock. For what the amp is, the sounds are excellent, whether using humbuckers or single coils. My taste is the cleaner overdriven sound with a lttle edge, and I tend to stay away from the heavier distorted sounds typical of Les Pauls and SG's.
I recently purchased a s/h Eric Christman G6N with a Seymour Duncan JB 4 in the neck and 2N Jazz in the neck. It has a split coil option and I can get very nice Strat and Les Paul tones. No problem.
But.........this is no Mesa Boogie! I had a Mark 3 60/100 Simul Class and this thing wouldn't come close, but neither would you expect it to.
There has been debate on whether or not the "clean" sound is clean enough. Probably not, especially with humbuckers. Jazz players with a fine ear may have problems. But it doesn't present a problem for me.
Reliability
:10
I haven't had a problem, but it very rarely goes out of the house. I hope it stays that way because I will have to ship it from one side of Australia to the other for service.
Customer Support
:8
I sent an email to Tech 21 for some info before I bought the amp and the reply was prompt. No complaints.
Overall Rating
:8
I've been playing for approx 25 years. I haven't owned every guitar and amp like a lot of others, but I have ears. Once again for what it is, it does a very fine job. For those who aren't getting a good sound, you're not trying hard enough. And for those of you who think it's better than a Mesa Boogie.........well ummmm hmmmm.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $250
Submitted 12/28/2004
at 11:52am
by bsman
Email: rsherman<at>hotmail dot com
Features
:8
I bought this amp in late 2001 because I was looking for a practice amp with a decent range of tonal options but was not terribly impressed with most of the modeling amps (Line 6 Spider, Johnson, etc.) that were available at that time. Features are as stated many times below. I also would enjoy the ability to channel switch using a footswitch, but for what I use this amp, that's not really a problem.
Sound Quality
:10
I have used this amp with an American Standard Telecaster (vintage noiseless PUs), Route 101 S-S-HR strat (clone), Aslin Dane Jazz 35 (ES-335 clone), Les Paul Deluxe, Ovation, and acoustics w/soundhole PU - therefore, I think I've pretty much been 'round the block with this. I play a wide variety of tunes, depending on my mood: classic rock, punk, country (think Dave Alvin), pretty much everything but modern metal. For the styles I play, I can always find a useful sound. I have to agree to a point with others on the tweed settings - Those chimey 'fendery' and 'voxy' tones don't jump out at you - it takes a bit of tweaking (sometimes more than a bit) to find the right spot. The tone-shaping controls are active, and interactive - to get it right, you have to adjust a little at a time. I usually start with everything at 12:00 and go from there. It takes patience, but once you find the right tone, it's heaven. I can get everything from a ringing beatle-esque clean to a very satisfying grunge roar. One hint - additional settings are available at http://www.cstone.net/~halouis/tm10/index.html?all. These make some good starting places. Also, there is a SansAmp GT2 site - http://members.tripod.com/Milaa/SansAmpGT2/indexGT2.html that has a bunch of settings, and since the TM10 is based on the DG2, these are all usable and give you more to start with than the few in the manual. Also, another hint - I have photcopied the 'blank' settings pages in the manual and everytime I find a setting for a particular tone, I write it down with notes on one of these pages. Anyway - to make a long story short - the tone you want is there - but you sometimes have to work a bit to find it. The only problem I have is that with humbuckers at higher volumes, the speaker gets a bit farty, but that's pretty much gonna happen with an 8" speaker... Oh, as others have noted, good reverb. Also, the amp has touch dynamics and 'breath' that is so tube-like it can fool people (my cousin actually did look in back to see if there were tubes in there!)
Reliability
:8
I've had this three years. The original pilot light went out and I received a new one from the factory - it was easy to replace. Other than that, it has been solidly reliable. Since I have had this thing apart, I can state the standards of construction are very, very good for a practice amp. Nothing on this amp is cheap or plast-icky.
Customer Support
:10
As I said - the pilot light burned out (apparently a congenital defect on earlier models that has since been rectified) and since I wasn't interested in sending it back to NYC, they sent out a new one with excellent instructions on replacement. I have sent several e-mails with questions or comments and have always received a rapid, thoughtful response. These guys definitely back their products!
Overall Rating
:9
Not that it matters, but I've been playing about 35 years - about ten seriously. If it were lost or stolen, I would definitely replace it - this is the one piece of equipment I have that is indispensable. I have compared this to almost every other low-powered amp out there, and have not yet found anything superior. Again, I would love to have channel switching, but if I ever really need it, I can get a TM-60.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: 299 (Euros)
Submitted 12/05/2004
at 04:39am
by Nils
Features
:8
See other rewiews for features, but I think if you make a headphone amp, it should have an extra input for CD's etc. to play to. IMHO his would make more sense than having an effects-loop since you could always put pedals in front of the amp or use the insert/aux-funktions on your mixer for delays and reverbs when recording.
Sound Quality
:4
I tried to get good clean sounds out of it, but it was disappointing. The Tweed-Channel lacks "sparkle" (did A/B it with a small 5-watt, class-A tube Amp
that has 12AX7-5AR4-6V6 tubes). I wasn't able to get a clean Marshall sound
(think Jimi Hendrix "The Wind Cries Mary"), because this setting has no headroom. The overdriven, distorted settings sounded much better to my ears, but that was not what I was after.
Reliability
:10
I was impressed with the construction. The pots have metal-shafts, not the plastic-ones you sometimes see on other amps (Fender Blues Jr., Ampeg J-12).
The pilot-light, the on/off-switch, the leather-handle, the amp-cover - it gives you the feeling this company cares to give you a quality product.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
I loved the quality construction and the easy "no-brainer" control layout. But since I was very disappointed by the clean sounds (the lack of a CD-input is a minus, too, in a home-practise-situation) I'm returning the amp to the store tomorrow :-(
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $250
Submitted 12/04/2004
at 11:54am
by Anonymous
Features
:10
Looks like everybody mentioned the featurs. The one thing I wish tech 21 did was put in a beter mesa boogie setting, it always is fuzzy and never clean.
Sound Quality
:9
This amp sounds beast! after using it on a recording with rode nt1 going to aphex tube pre then to a teac a 3440 I got some real mahavishnu like sounds out of this small amp. Also on a previous recording project where it was fed directly into a daw system via the xlr I got really amazing tones and a wide range of colors with very little noise. The only thing is I like a very wide sound (wich it delivers) but it can fuzz out on really low notes and overtones.
Reliability
:10
no problems
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/20/2004
at 10:47am
by Anonymous
Features
:9
I LOVE this little amp! I bought it because I needed a small practice amp and I already owned a PSA-1 and a Trademark 60. I'm in LOVE with the crunch on my tremoverb, but this thing sounds cool too. Tech 21 doesn't advertise this as a metal amp at all, but I can get some heavy sounds with this. The California voicing with the british speaker cab and the bass and treble cranked and the mid at 0-25% and u get this great heavy scooped out sound. This is a great amp. I even recorded direct with it into a 4 track and it sounded great. As far as practice amps go, this is great. It doesn't have channel switching, so i won't give it a 10. I can use headphones with it too, which can come in handy.
Sound Quality
:10
Once again, I love the distortion on this thing. The key is to turn up the bass and treble to give it more balls and play around with the california and british voicings to get the type of distortion u want. Play around with the mid to get a scooped sound or something with more bite. The British cab setting is more trebly and gives more of a crunch, while the california cab is bassier and deeper sounding. I can't comment on the tweed setting because I don't use it too much, I use the tweed setting on clean mostly with a distortion pedal because this amp doesnt do channel switching. I like the heavy sounds I can get out of this amp. It only has a single 10" speaker, so theres only so much u can realistically get from it, but just the same, as far as 10 watt practice amps go, this this is amazing. The distortion can be heavy and thick or more overdrivelike. U can get a cool old overdrive sound by setting the amp to british, then clean and turning up the gain all the way. U get the idea. This amp; and all tech 21 amps, seem to act like REAL tube amps, as opposed to say a POD which is definitely digital. I'm not knocking the POD, but this is a different species of technology. Tech 21 amps are not digital, they're analog.
Reliability
:10
its a solid state amp. enough said.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
n/a
Overall Rating
:9
a 9, because it doesnt have channel switching. I just end up using a distortion pedal with the tweed setting anyway, but it'd be nice to use a clean/crunch feature on this. Overall, it's a great practice amp that should give all others a run for their money.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: trade
Submitted 11/03/2004
at 05:57am
by PATRICK
Email: none
Features
:9
I can't add anything that hasn't been covered before. It has lots of features and the reason I rate it a 9 is because I never give 10's. So a 9 is the highest score I'm prepared to give anything. Certainly there are amps with more features but for me what counts is that it has exactly the features I use and nothing more. Who needs features that one does not use?
Also has a nice vintage look...
Sound Quality
:9
This little box certainly sounds a lot bigger than it is. I use Strats, LP's and one hollowbody jazzguitar and it sounds great with every single one. Thanks to the amp sims it is very versatile and will cover any stile of playing.
It also responds well to the effect in front of it or in the effectsloop. Usually I have a dunlop crybaby and a tubescreamer in front of the amp and a chorus in the loop. The spring reverb also works nicely.
Reliability
:8
I think its about two years old now and I've had no problems.
Customer Support
:9
I once mailed the guys at Tech21 and had a response the next day (not bad considering that I live in Europe).
Overall Rating
:9
I really love this amp. I got it in a trade (Laney all tube amp) and never had any regrets. It's mainly for use in the living room and for that it's perfect. It is not very loud but sounds like a big amp.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $250
Submitted 10/01/2004
at 12:58pm
by Stratcat
Features
:8
Three amplifier types. Three overdrive settings. Three speaker types. The resulting 27 tone combinations can be tweaked via the drive knob, 3-band EQ, reverb and master volume. There is a lot of variety of tones available therein. The relatively high score reflects the ease with which one can attain these tones, and do so with ease.
The aspects of these features that impress the most: spring reverb?it isn?t a fender tube reverb, but it sounds pretty good, and makes a big difference in making the ?tweed? setting sound as good as it does; XLR out?I can?t emphasize enough how nice this sounds recorded, and because it?s a combo amp, you can do something here that you couldn?t with, say, a POD, which is use microphone technique to mic the amp, while recording the direct XLR out simultaneously, either in stereo or two mono tracks; effects loop?I don?t need this very often for effects, but if you use rack stuff, it?ll come in handy, and this also enables you to run another preamp, such as a POD, into the return input, thereby bypassing the amps preamp and using it as a power amp with something else.
For a $250 practice amp, this feature set is highly useful, and I?ve found nothing about its design that isn?t a valuable function.
Sound Quality
:8
Let?s be clear about this category?this is not a tube amp. It does share some behaviors with good tube amps. There is a degree of ?sag? to the attack, but it?s most pronounced in the clean ?tweed? setting. Settings with higher amounts of distortion (and therefore increased compression) are less dynamic in this way, but not so much that it?s a drawback. When you dig into the string with the pick, i.e. hit the strings harder, it gets louder, just as it would (or should) with a tube amp. Does it have the same level of touch dynamics as a good tube amp? No, of course not. It isn?t a tube amp. But it?s a very fine emulation of one, and provides qualities that most tube amps don?t-portability, light weight design, other features mentioned above.
Here?s a question?is it better to have a really lousy tube amp or a really great solid state amp? I?ve read reviews by customers who are disappointed that this amp isn?t louder or to doesn?t have channel switching. That?s like buying a compact car and complaining that it doesn?t go off-road. This is not an amp for playing in a loud band?maybe a quiet jazz combo, but that?s about it.
Another issue?the marriage of specific guitars with specific tube amps?the tele/fender deluxe, les paul/marshall plexi, rickenbacker/AC30 (etc.) are popular recipes because they work?they sound great. I have several amps and lots of guitars. The TM10 is great because it sounds good with all my guitars. I can do the twangy/trebly telecaster one minute, and get a warm soulful tone from my semi-hollow the next. I can play blues on my strat or go shred deluxe with the les paul. It?s a true swiss army knife in that sense. But I wouldn?t use it with a live drummer, and I wouldn?t think of running it into a P.A. unless I had no other alternative. There?s a reason why they still build big combos and stacks?you need to move the air, get that natural feedback, feel the notes you?re playing with other amplified musicians?for these situations I would recommend using something other than the TM10. And let me also point out that I have indeed run the TM10 into a 1x12 cabinet and a 4x12 cabinet. It is true that these cabs make it feel louder?there is definitely more bottom end with a 12-inch speaker?and you might be able to get a loud enough sound to play with a drummer, especially if the drummer doesn?t play very loud himself. My opinion is that this only speaks to the versatility of the TM10. I would not point to this factor as a big selling point, only that you can get some beefier sound this way?and if you do, be sure to set the speaker type to ?flat? as you will be getting your speaker characteristics from an actual speaker?in my case, celestions and EV?s?
So, the sound quality is great for direct recording and practicing. My personal preferences are for a fender ?tweed? setting and the ?uk? marshall setting with some crunch and overdrive. I already own a boogie tube amp, and that tone is arguably much more satisfying at a louder volume?I?ll probably focus on the former two settings for practice purposes.
Reliability
:10
I?ll give Tech21 the benefit of the doubt, based on the fact that I?ve owned the Sansamp Classic, which held up for years, and was recently re-furbished (by Tech 21)for a very reasonable price. It?s now back to nearly-new condition and sounds great as ever. This is a company that stands behind its products.
Customer Support
:10
Ditto.
Overall Rating
:9
If you are looking for a small practicing amp which sounds great and adds utility to your recording arsenal, then I recommend this product. I also love the fact that it is so light and portable. Note to those who wish it had channel switching?right now I?m running through an effect with stereo outs, with the left channel going direct to an A/B splitter, and the right channel going through the POD into the other side of the splitter. The splitter main out goes into the TM10. Voila, instant two-channel amplification system. And the POD sounds good with this amp (with some tweaking obviously) because it?s designed for amp modeling, with flat EQ etc. so I typically run the TM10 fairly clean, and the POD channel with some overdrive, maybe some effects?.for practicing or one-on-one jamming, it works out great. I?d recommend this amp to anybody.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $200 used
Submitted 08/31/2004
at 01:50pm
by Brad Deen
Features
:10
Packed. The versatility this amp offers in such a small package at such a decent price is astounding. As if 27 permutations of Amp Model/Drive/Speaker weren't enough, you can tweak each basic sound with a Gain knob, three tones and an actual reverb tank.
Frankly, I don't understand others' complaints about the lack of a footswitch. I see the Trademark 10 as mostly a practice and home-recording amp. Neither application requires instantaneous channel switching. If you must go from, say, a clean to dirty sound on the fly, I suggest either using a good pedal or buying an amp that's made for that purpose.
And bless the good folks at Tech 21 for including a cover. Nice touch.
Sound Quality
:9
Most of the 27 combinations are useful. I don't play metal, so I rarely crank the Drive switch or the Boogie simulation, although that soaring Santana tone can be had using both. The Marshall setting reproduces that classic scooped-mids tone for rhythm, and at higher-gain settings, it can scorch without blowing out your eardrums. Both Marshall and Boogie clean sounds are grating and harsh, although I'm sure many players could make them sound musical.
The Fender model is where I spend most of my playing time. I play blues, rock, country and a little jazz (very little), so the warm, clean tones are what I'm after. For a little dirt, I'll throw the Drive switch in mid-position. But the modeling on this amp is so realistic, that you can drive the Fender setting to distort by digging into the strings, just as you would a tube amp. The handling and tone aren't identical to a good tube amp -- you won't get that sweet, liquid sound of tube overdrive -- but they're damned close. And for $200 and not having to deal with temperamental hot glass, I'll make that compromise again and again.
The 8-inch speaker is surprisingly excellent. It won't give you the bass of a lager speaker, naturally, but what's there sounds . The amp isn't very loud, and its headroom for clean tones is rather low. But I do much of my playing at night, after my daughter -- and frequently my wife -- are already asleep. There's a headphone out, but even the best headphones rarely equal a full-sized speaker, even a small one.
My only other gripe would be the reverb. It's pretty good, but not great. Above 11 o'clock, it's a bit flubby-sounding. Still, it's an actual spring tank, an Accutronics at that, and a hell of a lot better than the boingy digital reverbs on comparably-priced solid-state combos.
Reliability
:No Opinion
Can't say. I haven't had it long, but it seems sturdy. Besides, I don't gig anymore. My playing these days is limited to the spare room.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
I've never dealt with Tech 21. The store from which I bought it, on the other hand, is tops in my book. They could have sold this amp to me as new because the previous owner didn't keep it long. The box was stll pristine, and the amp cover was still flat and pleated, never even unfolded.
When the guy returned it, he told the salesman it "didn't have the sound I was looking for," which probably means it wasn't loud enough to rattle his bedroom windows and annoy his parents. I shouldn't make fun of him, though, because I bought it for just over half the original retail price.
That said, I believe the best customer service is producing a good product from the start. This seems to be a winner.
Overall Rating
:10
I wish these amps had been on the market 25 years ago, when I first started playing guitar -- or even seven years ago, when I picked it up again after a long hiatus. It's much more versatile, pleasant-sounding and quieter than my first cheesy, solid-state Kustom. It's less troublesome and actually warmer-sounding than the tube Crate I played as a teenager. And it actually cost less than the buzzy solid-state DOD I bought when I started playing again.
I doubt I'll ever own a high-end Fender, Marshall, Boogie or a boutique, hand-wired beauty. Considering that I play for my own amusement these days, I couldn't justify the cost of those expensive toys. But I can get sounds that come pretty close to all those benchmark amps with this $200 Tech 21. And the sound levels won't wake my family or start a feud with my neighbors. All in all, it may be the best buy I've ever made.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $140 used
Submitted 08/26/2004
at 11:09pm
by S. Villafranca
Features
:10
Everybody before me has pretty much covered the features of this great amp. The greatest feature of this amp is its versatility. You can dial in so many amazing tones from this thing! A footswitch would've been nice, but Tech 21's packed so much into this little wonder that I can overlook this detail.
I'm mostly a bedroom (actually, computer room) musician. I wanted a small little amp for late nights when my wife and son are sleeping. I looked into the TM-10 because I read so many things about it. It seemed like the right ticket for me, as I like to tinker with sounds and whatnot. The TM-10 was everything I was looking for.
Using this amp is pretty darn easy. I checked out some Line 6 amps and they didn't seem as user friendly as the TM-10. The sample settings are a great starting point to get a taste fo the amp's capabilities. It's a blast to turn a few knobs and find new tones. The knobs are very sensitive and reponsive to the slightest turn, so be patient with them.
On top of all this, the Trademark 10 is one good-looking amp. It has a nice mix of a both vintage and modern vibe. The fit and finish on this amp is also top notch, which from what I hear, all Tech 21 products are.
Sound Quality
:10
I'm running an '82 G&L SC-2 thru this baby. To be exact, it's:
SC-2 > Original Dunlop Crybaby > Trademark 10
The fact that you can combine so many settings and get a plethora of completely different vibes blows my mind. For such a small box, it really can pack a wallop. I've read that the 8" speaker was specifically designed for the tonal range that this amp puts out, and it shows. It's surprisingly powerful and can handle a lot of punch.
I don't gig at all, so I never really get to crank things up to ten. Even without cranking it up, the TM-10 crunches out some real nice distortion tones. I've never owned a tube amp, for the sheer fact that I can't afford one. This amp is prolly the closest thing I'll get to a real tube sound.
I was able to get some nice clean sounds that worked for me. A good place to start finding a clean tone is to have the settings at: Tweed / Clean / UK and then all the knobs at 12 o'clock. Play around with the Low Mid and High knobs with the Reverb knob going more towards 10 o'clock and I'm sure you'll find something that works for you.
As mentioned in a previous review, there is a cool site where some folks have submitted their personal settings. It's at: http://www.cstone.net/~halouis/tm10/
Reliability
:10
Tech 21 has a pretty solid reputation when it comes to their products. I expect this amp to keep on keepin on for a long time.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:10
I wouldn't hesitate this amp to anyone looking to get a lot of bang for their buck and like the idea of experimenting with a modelling amp. I will never afford to own a Fender, a Marshall, and a Mesa amp all at the same time, so the TM-10 lets me live as though I own them all. Plus, I got this used for $140, which is just a sick price for such a great product. I prolly got my money's worth from the first week alone!
This definitely aint an amp for tube purists, but for people who need a solid small practice amplifier and can't play at high levels, this amp would definitely be worth considering. If you especially enjoy tinkering with settings, the TM-10 is just chock full of possibilities. Try one. It'll shock you!
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $240.00
Submitted 08/07/2004
at 09:59pm
by Anonymous
Features
:4
This amp has a tech 21 sans amp type of pre-amp built in. 8 inch speaker. XLR line out. spring reverb. The amp looks really cool- kind of a vintage look.
Sound Quality
:4
I had this amp for about three years. I just sold it and bought a Gibson GA-5 Les Paul Junior amp which I like much better. When I first got the Trademark 10 i liked it but over time I used it less and less because I liked the sound less and less. The sound seemed to be dark - I always had to crank the treble up all the way and still had to add treble from a pedal effect. I was able to get a lot of low end bass - I was surprised that a small amp could have that much low end. But eventually i thought the sound was too "boxy". I never liked any of the overdrive sounds. The reverb isn't that good- it sounds bad if you turn it up past half way. I like a clean/overdriven sound. I'm not into a heavy metal sound.
Reliability
:8
seemd very reliable.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:4
It sounded better after I bought a Blackstone Appliances Mosfet Overdrive. But still I grew tired of the amp's sound.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: 295 (EUR)
Submitted 07/22/2004
at 02:28am
by Anonymous
Features
:9
Solidstate amp. 1x8' speaker. Usual bass/mid/treble/gain/volume + reverb. Sliding knobs to choose amp type (tweed, british, california), distortion (clean, high gain, hot) and speaker type (flat, brit, US). On the back panel: speaker out, FX send/return, grounds lift. Rated at 10W of power.
All in all pretty versatile for what is really a practice amp. I took away one point for it being a single channel. But then you can't win them all!
Sound Quality
:8
I tell ya... It definitely takes some tweaking as the controls are ULTRA-sensitive. The first time I plugged it in, I was not impressed. Especially not by the sample settings...
After some tweaking I found some very useable sounds. I use a Kramer for my hardrocking sounds and found that it sounds best on British, hot, US. With the gain on about 6.5 and slightly more treble than bass, with the mids at about 2. Got a Boss DD5 delay in the FX loop for the solos and it sounds really good. Loads of harmonics. Fairly good sustain, but not as good as my Laney TF on OD2.
I use a couple of Yamahas for my blues/jazz sounds and the tweed settings are very good. SRV is in there and with a tele you can get very nice country sounds.
My only beef is that it does lack some real "clean" sounds. Maybe I have some more tweakin' to do before I find those, but I haven't found them yet. For straight ahead jazz I haven't found my sound yet.
Also, the Brit and Cafif. settings are a lot louder than the tweed with a moderate gain.
The Californian settings tend to be more noisy too, even with the gain only half way up.
Maybe I'll find more sounds as I go along, but for now I'll leave it at an 8/10.
Reliability
:No Opinion
Only had it for a couple of days. Looks pretty sturdy though. I guess you could gig with it, especially with an extra speaker hooked up to it.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never needed to contact them so far.
Overall Rating
:8
PROS: Size & weight! Solidstate, so low maintainance. Fairly loud for 10W, so with a speaker extension it's giggable. Professional sound at bedrooms levels (and above - the high gain Brit sounds with the volume halfway up is louder than most neighbours would tolerate if you live in an apartment). It sounds like a big boy, despite it's size.
CONS: No really useable "clean" (and I mean pristine clean for jazz) sounds to speak of. No channel switching. A tad expensive. Behringer offers a similar design without reverb for only 99$ and supposedly the sounds are just as nice.
I'm a mostly a bedroom player who plays the occasional small gig so I'm never gonna buy an actual stack. To me this does the trick: it's extremely small, but it sounds very big and all at earpleasing (not earbleeding) volume levels.
I do wish it had a true clean sound, but I'll probably A/B it with my Laney TF. That way I have a true clean + I can switch channels by switching amps.
All in all a good product well worth looking into. For those who can't afford the price, check out the Behringer.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: 320,00 (euro)
Submitted 07/12/2004
at 06:16am
by Maury
Email: sixblades at libero<dot>it
Features
:10
Vera alta qualita di produzione USA....
persino le viti sono eccellenti,l'ampli ariva con tanto di copertina antipolvere.
Singolo canale ampli analogico a modelli che prende spunto dai tre amplificatori di riferimento ....Fender twin..Marshall...Mesa dual recto.
Ovviamente l'ampli ricalca le caratteristiche dei tre ampli citati
non e che li imita alla perfezione e assolutamente impossibile,ma questo,a meno che non hai cominciato a suonare adesso ,gia dovresti saperlo.
Dunque dicevamo modeling dei sopracitati ampli ,regolazione di gain
e imitazione di microfonatura,ottimo riverbero a molle,controlli attivi,uscita cuffie,uscita bilanciata per recording...un vero gioiello in miniatura altro che Pod....veramente famntastico
Sound Quality
:10
Il suono che dire non ha la botta dinamica di un buon valvolare ma sicuramente suona meglio di molti "cattivi" valvolari la risposta e buona e i suoni sono molto belli e abbastanza fedeli ai modelli che la tech 21 ha cercato di riproporre.
CLEAN: Molto buono ma mi aspettavo meglio,anche usando una Fender showmaster custom shop lo sparkle alla Knopfler e difficile da ottenere anche se cmq si tirano fuori un bel po di suoni belli
GLI DIAMO UN BELL' 8
SRV: Fantastico...molto somigliante bello e divertentissimo da usare
VOTO 10
AC/DC: WOW di bene in meglio vai con hell's bells a manetta
VOTO 10
HI GAIN BRITISH: Bellisssimo anche questo
VOTO 10
DUAL RECTO: Qui la cosa si fa dura..suona bene anche se dire che suona come una Mesa e un po sacrilego..resta cominque buona l'approssimazione.
VOTO 8
Il suono nel complesso ha una buona risposta dinamica, non suona per niente digitale (tutto analogico remember) e c'e una buona presenza di armoniche pari,il che rende il suono abbastanza valvoloso.
Tutto sommato un gran bell'ampli.
Reliability
:No Opinion
BHHOOOOOO.!!!!!
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Come sopra...
Overall Rating
:10
Suono da parecchi anni ..di caccavelle digitali ne ho provate tante
puntualmente svendute,in qualche caso regalate.
Ma questo piccolo F.d.P. suona veramente in modo grandioso,non credo che me ne separero piu, e ottimo sia per esercitarsi (suono distortissimo a bassissimi volumi)che per registrare,bellissimo in cuffia ed in diretta nel mixer,abbinandoci un gt2 ci si puo suonare in piccoli locali utilizzandolo con tastiere e batterie elettroniche,oppure utilizzarlo in sala prove.
Un apparecchio decisamente ben riuscito,il fatto stesso che e introvabile usato la dice tutta sulla validita di questo giocattolo.
Sicuramente ogni chitarrista dovrebbe averne uno
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: 350 (can)
Submitted 07/07/2004
at 08:01pm
by Jeff
Features
:10
Same as noted below. Basically this amp has everything that you could ask for in a practice amp and more. I find the headphone jack very useful for late-night practice. I rarely use the effects loop, but it's nice to know that it is there if you need it. This amp also has a very classy look to it.
Sound Quality
:9
I mainly play blues and classic rock. I play an American Tele and Strat. I find that both of these guitars sound great through this amp, especially the tele, which can produce a bit too much treble through some solid-state amps.
This little amp produces a wide range of sounds, everything from a mesa/high-gain sound to a creamy blues tone. I'm also really impressed with the quality reverb that this amp offers. It's comparable with my Fender amp and better than my Marshall tube amp! I find that the best thing to do is to start with the sample settings that come with the amp and go from there. The only sound that I don't like is the "flat" speaker setting which, as the name suggests, makes the amp sound very dull. Aside from that, it doesn't take much tweeking with the other settings to find a nice tone.
Reliability
:10
I've owned this amp for a year now and I've never had a problem with it. It's very well built and looks like it could survive a pretty good beating.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
I've never had to deal with the company.
Overall Rating
:10
I've been playing for about 15 years now. I played in a few bands when I was younger, but mainly just play for fun now. I currently own an American Tele, American Strat, Fender Blues Deville, Marshall DSL401 and an assortment of various effects pedals, which I rarely ever use. If this amp were stolen I'd definitely buy another.
I've owned a lot of small, solid state amps over the years (marshall, fender, peavy, etc...) and this is the best one by far. It's a bit more expensive than similar amps, but it's worth the money. I can't think of anything else this amp could use, except a 25 watt big brother.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $195
Submitted 06/17/2004
at 02:54am
by David Martinez
Features
:10
The simulations are just great. Everything abut them and other features have been commented before.
Sound Quality
:10
I play with a Gibson Les Paul Standard Plus. You can get any sound you look for. From Clapton to Gary Moore or Van Halen. The sample settings manufacturer gives are quite bad but if you spend some time you get great sounds. I've got the nicest vintage OD pedals you can imagine (Tubescreamer, british Guv'nor, Japanese SD-1...) but I do not use them with this amp because it sounds great alone. The 3 spring reverb is fantastic too.
Reliability
:7
I use a '66 Fender Bassman for gigs and I'll continue with it mainly because the Tech21 has no pedalboard to control the OD, reverb etc....
Customer Support
:10
I contacted them to ask for a recommendation regarding the speakers to be used in a external cab and I received their reply in less than 24hours. Try this with fender, Gibson, Ibanez.... NO WAY!!!
Overall Rating
:9
20 years playing the guitar and I love this little amp. I'll probably sell my little Fender Tweed because probably I won't use it anymore. If it were stolen, broken or lost I would definitely buy another one.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $185.00
Submitted 06/03/2004
at 10:08pm
by DanF
Features
:10
The features have been discussed many times but it is a 10 watt combo amp with active eq and several amp models. Effects loop, XLR out and headphone jack. On a scale of being very limited to very versatile it is very versatile. Although I play mostly jazz so I don't use it's power all the time.
Sound Quality
:9
The simulations all seem very good. There are combinations that I don't like but they can be toned down. I play a semi-hollow dual humbucker jazz box and a solid body mahogany H/H electric for rocking or funking out.
Reliability
:10
I have owned the amp for almost a year now with no problems at all. I don't think I would gig with it but not for reliability issues but because it is more of a recording and practicing amp. It could probably handle it though (especially run through the mixer at the venue).
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Haven't needed it but the manual is very good
Overall Rating
:10
Unlike many reviewers (apparently) I've never actually owned a Mesa Boogie or any other "good" gear so I guess I don't have great credentials. My only other amp was a Crate VC3112 (which I chose over a Fender Blues Jr. and Peavey). This little guy is a far better amp then that for what I do. If it were stolen I'd buy another.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 06/03/2004
at 08:28am
by Anonymous
Features
:No Opinion
Sound Quality
:6
this is a good practice/home amp and thats it really...with a DI to the PA it really doesn't cut it unless you want a dirtier sound all the time-also it will get kind of ugly and peaky if you push it at all(which is not so unusual with SS circiuts but the sansamp thing should be better)...if you are messing around at home it's a fine little amp but don't expect it to handle anything more-the Digitech RP-10 floor board i had sounded much MUCH better thru the PA than the Trademark 10 does.
Reliability
:No Opinion
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:6
maybe the bigger versions of this amp are better for gigs or anything other than your basement/bedroom-for a practice amp it is probably a good 7 or 8 but the whole DI thing is not very effective. someone else may love this but i wasn't for me.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $249
Submitted 05/27/2004
at 06:16am
by Andy D.
Email: jz514<at>aol dot com
Features
:9
See below for features. Lots of sounds for a small amp. I use it mainly clean with the different speaker types and no distortion.
Sound Quality
:6
While there is a wide variety of choices, the basic sound of the amp is just passable. A clean sound with an archtop is very nice. However add a semi-hollow and the sound is thin, even after adjusting the eq, spaeker type, etc. You cannot get a full size speaker (12") sound out of this amp. I've heard other 8" speakers with much fuller sound.
Reliability
:2
This is where the amp really stinks. 1 month after the warranty expired the amp started "cutting out". The volume would disappear as if there was a loose connection. I contacted the manufacturer who said this is a common problem and usually occurs when the contacts on the effects loop get "dirty". I bought a contact cleaner and tried to clean the connections by "jamming a 1/4" plug in and out" as instructed by the customer service rep. This didn't work and I had to send in the amp to Tech 21. BTW- a friend has this amp and is having the same problem.
Customer Support
:7
As I said i had to mail the amp to Tech 21. They had it for 2 weeks without a word. I finally contacted them and they called and said the amp was ready. They only charged $25. They said a number of connections were resoldered and cleaned.
Overall Rating
:5
I bougt this amp to have a high quality small unit for playing at home and at friends. I could have bought many other small 8" amps for much less money but I thought this one was better quality. It's not worth the money.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $175
Submitted 05/26/2004
at 09:28pm
by Anonymous
Features
:9
When I have band practice, I bring my pedal board with all the efx. This makes practice the same as live. Couldn't do that without an efx loop. This amp is truley geared for professionals in mind, with a small, but effective package!!! It coud use a channel switcher in their next issue, but I use a single channel Marshall JCM800 head anyway, so no bother there.
Sound Quality
:10
This is a practice amp??? Jeez. Just go play one. There is nothing that even comes close!!!! This catagory needs to go to 11, but 10 will have to do.
Reliability
:No Opinion
Havn't owned it long enough.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Outstanding. Second to none!!
Overall Rating
:10
I have owned every product from Line 6 and like them. This is just better. Here is my TUBE opinion vs. this solid state (or my JCM800 vs. Trademark). Can it compare to my tube amp? As far as "tone" goes, the trademark sounds unreal. But where a non tube amp just doesn't hang is the reactiveness or responsiveness. I can get my head to sound almost clean by picking quieter, then a raging distortion if I thump on it. The range is just unreal!! This translates to you as a guitar player having a "oneness" with your amp. You can control it in a way that "channel switchers" will never understand. The tubes become an extension of your playing. Solid state by it's nature just doesn't react like this. It is transistor and metal. Tubes practically have a pulse. Now that said, the Tradmark 10 is by far the most unreal little amp I have ever played and don't intend on selling it. Kudos Tech 21!!!!!
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: #250ish
Submitted 05/26/2004
at 10:00am
by Millicent
Features
:10
I perhaps shouldn't write this as I only tried it out in a shop, but I had a good go with it and was amazed.
This is a small solid state amp with - I think - an 8-inch speaker and the additional electronics equivalent to a sansamp GT2.
For a practice amp it's extremely well appointed, but I was told it has a balanced XLR out for putting straight into a PA. It therefore has the bizarre property of being good for low volume practicing or auditorium gigs, but isn't powerful for smaller gigs without a PA.
Sound Quality
:10
I sat by a group a large super-well appointed combos, a big Vetta and suchlike, to try out this little amp and I couldn't believe the sounds I was making was all coming from the Trademark 10.
I didn't buy it because I'd just bought a sansamp GT2, which is most of what's in the Trademark 10, but I may buy it yet.
The sounds were as close classy and big as one could ever hope for from a small amp. At 10 watts I doubt it would carry over drums or saxophones, but it would do well for rocking up an acoustic session and would be excellent for practising any style.
The switches emulate clean, driven and very driven sounds from fender, marshall and boogie amps, with three different miking styles. It has active boost/cut controls for bass and high, a level knob, and a gain control for overdrive. I found the fender clean sounds very warm and full and the hi-gain sounds were astonishing for the amp's size.
Reliability
:No Opinion
don't know
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Don't know
Overall Rating
:10
I've been playing for a quarter of a century.
I have a small Boogie Caliber, a Fender HR Deluxe, a Sundown Artist and a Laney LC 15. I use Variaxe, music man, a Ventura jazzer and an old oriental epiphone shallow body.
I didn't buy the Trademark 10 since I've already got a sansamp gt2, which instead of being a small amp is pocketable and should do me for the PA, while I can pop it in front of any practice amp to get the same versatility at home. I am, however, still thinking of getting one, and duplicating my purchase, because it's that in-betweeny lightweight size, smaller than my laney, but a bigger sound than any small tranny amp I've come across.
I think anyone looking for portability or versatility at home should make sure they try this one out.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: NA
Submitted 05/20/2004
at 08:57pm
by Anonymous
Features
:8
For a practice amp, it has a lot. I don't like to lug the big equipment around to practice, so if it had an efx loop and foot switch, I could use my pedalboard with it. Also, I would seriously consider taking this to small gigs. But as it stands, features are fine.
Sound Quality
:10
Simply blown away that I was on a practice amp. I had the Peavey Envoy (nice practice amp actually), the mediocre Marshall 15 watter, and Roland's "similar" Cube amp. These arn't even in the same league folks!! The Tech 21 is a legitimate rocker, the others are considered true practice amps in my book, this one is more than just that. I liked the British/Drive/British setting the best (Marshall). EASY 10
Reliability
:8
I'm sure it's ok with it being solid state.
Customer Support
:10
I've called and they simply are out to serve us, their customers!!!
Overall Rating
:10
Buy it and don't look back. It is simply the BEST practice amp available. The looks are very botiquish and cool. The on-board EQ is ultra sensitive to touch and opens up a lot of possibilities that other amps don't. It's a little pricey, but you won't sell it and loose money like you did on the other inferior practice amp. So pony up!! I don't work for them, I just love this amp and it deserves all the glory.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $275
Submitted 04/24/2004
at 07:33pm
by Jeff Davis
Email: incbx<at>yahoo dot com
Features
:9
2003 Model. You know the features. 10 watts but enough to practice with a dynamic drummer who can play at volumes that don't require ear plugs. I wish it had 2 channels with independent controls and a footswitch so I could use it at clubs (seriously!).
Sound Quality
:8
Tried and tested with a 2003 Les Paul Standard and a Fender HMX, mostly using the bridge pickup. Pretty quiet amp, sweet warm distortion. I REALLY LIKED this amp. It has a plethora of nice tones and sounds. After testing it for a couple hours, however, I found ONE BUG. When I played single note melodies distorted up around the 12th fret on the B string, there was clanky-clanky sound that it generated with a pitch about an octave below what i was playing. Tried both guitars and the effect was the same. This was *very* disappointing because I was basically satisfied with everything else this amp had to offer. Sure the clean wasnt as bright and chimey as a Blackface, but I could potentially play this thing for days and days and have myself a good time.
I knew that it would bother me in the longer run, because every time id hear it I would notice it. SO, I called the manufacturer and talked with them. They were pretty helpful and said theyve never heard of the problem. They were willing to pay for shipping so i could ship it to them and they could check it out, but I bought it from musician's friend (MF) and i didnt want to nullify my warranty. Instead, I returned it to MF and they sent me another.
The second one had a lower serial number and I think it might have actually been a return but i dunno. Oddly, I found a box cutter in the amp's box, which was shipped stand-alone, as opposed to the first which came inside a larger box with popcorn package stuffing in it. I thought this was odd but was eager to check it out.
Of course, first thing I did was check out the distorted single note bug, and it was my pleasure to find that it didnt have this problem. Unfortunately, I found something else. This one had a different bug: when playing a 3rd interval on the B and G strings distorted (major or minor, but major was more pronounced) a rattling clickity-clickty slash grumbly sound was made (again both guitars, same phenomenon). This sound was much lower in pitch, maybe two octaves or so. I was *very* disappointed to say the least. This bug however was more minor than the other, since I more often play single note melodies distorted than I do 3rd intervals.
SO, I reluctantly gave up, returned the unit and haven't looked back. I'm writing the review 1 year later, because I've re-begun my search for THE amp, and I feel I owe it to the harmony-central reviewers to give my opinion/experience on this product.
Reliability
:8
Don't get me wrong, this amp is sweeeeeeet. All kinds of cool sounds and so many usable distortions. Because the 2 bugs I found were different and what not, I tend to think the problems were the result of mishandling during shipment. Based on this, my opinion is that the amp is a tad delicate. It's solid state and i bet that the PCB is relatively thin. Since this amp is basically a SansAmp pedal with a speaker and solid state amp, it might be better to just get the pedal. I haven't checked it out, but i sure will once I find THE amp. Already checked out a Bogner Shiva, THD UniValve, Mesa Boogie F30, BadCat 30R and a Fender VibroVerb Custom. Don't know what I'll be getting just yet, since price is not an issue and Im looking for the amp i will have for the next 20-30 years.
Customer Support
:10
I spoke with customer support and as soon as I mentioned playing a 3rd interval, they transferred me to a technician. The guy was really cool and offered to pay for shipping and all that. I declined, but they were really very friendly. If i ever go to New York city, you better bet that I'm going over to Tech21 to take my pick from the lot!
Overall Rating
:8
Been playing for 15 years. Got a 2003 LP STD, Fender HMX, '63 Martin classical. I'm a minimalist, so I don't have lots of extra stuff. At the moment, the only amp i own is the first one I bought when I was 13, a 10W Boss piece of ass. Can't wait to find my dream amp.
I'd definitely buy this one again if I saw it in a store where I could test it out. If I didn't find any bugs with it, like the aforementioned ones, there'd be NO QUESTION!! It's a really cool amp, and I'd love to have one. Fantastic value! No doubt! Just can't stand to find a problem with it because it will eat at my everytime i play it. Like having a scab that you can't help pickin at. Oh well... Anyone experienced these probs?
If you have any recommendations, let me know! I'm in search of THE amp. Price is NOT AN ISSUE. Been looking at some boutique amps, but basically want a super bad ass amp for my LP: 1x12, tube, 2 channels, w/footswitch and independent reverb controls less than 30 watts. The best fit I've found is a Mesa Boogie F30 but I dunno if it's just right just yet.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 04/23/2004
at 02:59am
by ertdragon
Features
:10
Already mentioned bellow. No Question about it.
Sound Quality
:10
Best ever built Practice amp, and far more.
Iam a hardcore Rock Metalhead. Been playing guitar since.... dont ask maybe 1984. I have legions of gutars. Yeahh my intruments are old ones. Fenix, Yamaha, Washburn Wings series Squiers, I love Japanese guitars of 80's. And certainly have an EBMM Axis. All the Instruments are Dimarzio Equipped.
This little amp as good as it is. Mr Anonymus said, that there is no clean. Then I say buy a Guitar! With my neckthru swamp ash maple top guitar, with my Parallel Bluesbucker pu, and parallel Megadrive I able to reach nearly acousic sound. Dinamic is Incredible! Yes it is 10 watt only.
I use it as a practice amp, and as a preamp. In our studio I use it with Peavey 50/50 pewer, and a 412 Marshall stack. Sounds fantastic.
I used a Mesa single recto solohead before. I loved it as well, but this little thing with peavey poweramp is however the devil itself, and more versatile. Has a couple of useful sounds. If someone buy one has to tweek days to find the sounds.
Reliability
:10
Never broke down!
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:10
see above
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: 155 (GBP) used
Submitted 04/19/2004
at 04:30am
by Tim
Email: tim<at>timodonnell dot co dot uk
Features
:10
I bought this via the UK eBay site about a year ago so not sure of the exact age. It's a 1x8" combo with reverb, drive, volume, and ACTIVE bass, mid, treble. There are switchable options for amp type, speaker response type and drive type eg:
Amp: Tweed, British, American
Drive: Clean, Drive, Hot
Speaker: Flat, British, American
Insert Tweed=Fender, British=Marshall, American=Boogie and you won't go far wrong.
Sound Quality
:9
The common observation is that the clean option is vastly reduced in volume compared to the other 2 and that it is never pristine sparlky clean. I don't feel this is a problem as it is not designed to be a live-use switchable sounds type of amp.
The amp comes with a booklet of suggested settings which are excellent - particularly the ACDC type settings and flip to American/Hot and it's pure Carlos. There is also a (non Tech 21) website where users list their favourite settings and these are a good starting point to see just how verstaile this amp is.
Reliability
:7
My amp recently developed a fault - the reverb packed in. apart from that it's a solid state device and is very robust
Customer Support
:10
I e-mailed Tech 21 when the reverb gave up the ghost and they replied the next day with detailed instructions regarding how to diagnose where the fault is - (it turns out my reverb tank is dead)
The response was swift and detailed and it's my best experience of dealing with any manufacturer.
Overall Rating
:9
In detailing the above I have completely failed to express how much I love this little amp - the sound is transparent enough for the individual voice of each guitar to come trough yet the inherrent quality of all the tones is excellent. The recent problem with the reverb is a shame but I would recommend anyone to try one of these little fellas if they are in the market for a small amp.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $175
Submitted 04/10/2004
at 09:14am
by Anonymous
Features
:No Opinion
Sound Quality
:5
I need to respond to "Jake," who took issue with my review. He says that I am probably not sure about anything. I agree. However, I "know my models." My review's purpose was to point out to those who are looking for real versatility in regard to ALL tones, one needs to look beyond the many reviews here. This amp, as I tried to say (though I might not have been successful at doing so) is packed with features, is great at emulating the entire gamut of overdriven to double-rectified tones, but if one is looking for that AND an abiity to play clean, it's NOT GOING TO HAPPEN with the Tech 21 TM10. There is no way to ever get one note out of this thing that doesn't have at least mildly overdriven harmonics added. That might be a good thing for many, but know that what the masses might think about sweet tones might not be what you consider sweet tones. They think they're right because of their number, but your idea about tone is distinctively yours.
Reliability
:No Opinion
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:7
Anyone who loves the full gamut of distorted tones will love this amp (and so will the neighbors), but couldn't there have been one setting that would have been truly clean, to which all of the other wizardry could be added by degree?
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $269.00
Submitted 04/06/2004
at 02:23pm
by Anonymous
Email: mark dot neal<at>wallacestate dot edu
Features
:10
2003 Trademark 10 combo. This is a versatle little monster for any style of music. It has enough features to cover any base you need. As a 20+ year player and teacher, I now teach at the college level, I instuct a R&B type college band and plugged into a 4x12 cab it cut through the mix just find with out the xlr output.
Sound Quality
:10
I play humbucker guitars playing rock, jazz, r&b, funk,and anything else that get my fancy for the week.It is very quiet even turned up in our rehearsal hall, and with my rhythm section you have to be cranked enough to get throught the mix,and dont forget the horns. this amp makes the perfect sound for me.Tones I have been looking for and only seem to find in large, loud amps this machine will do it for me.The clean channel is that good dirty clean when you roll back the guitar and chunk a funky rythm.
Reliability
:No Opinion
Hope it last forever.
Customer Support
:10
Caled the company before i PUCHASED.Super nice. we talked about a hour.
Overall Rating
:10
I have been playing over 20 years and as happy as a little school girl with it.and a 14 lbs it will be easy to get from gig to gig, yes it is loud enough to gig with if you use an extentionspeaker.it ssounds great,I would buy another one if this one wasnt so easy to luge around.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 04/06/2004
at 02:56am
by Jake
Features
:No Opinion
Sound Quality
:9
Here's a quote below and then the reason I pointed this out:
"Here's the deal--and I know I am the odd man out, here, but I'll give it to you straight. I have bought and sold three of these."
"... but I keep selling these because this amp does not do clean--at all. But if you want to play clean--even on occasion--forget it."
Dude, if you bought/sold this 3 times you are obviously not sure of anything. You are probably A/Bing modern clean fender amps to the TWEED which has a raspy-biting sound and isn't 100% clean period! Learn your amp models and sounds before complaining about the sounds. This amp accurately mimics the amp models it has.
Reliability
:No Opinion
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $200
Submitted 03/27/2004
at 08:11am
by Anonymous
Features
:8
This amp has features galore. It could be considered a miracle, in a way. Certainly, I can see guitarists back in the 70s fantasizing about something like this, never thinking that it could ever really be. For features, it probaly deserves a "10," but the pull-down menu here has the "Versatile" next to it, and this amp is versatile to a great degree--but to a "10"? No. Features =10 Versatility = 8 or less
Sound Quality
:4
Here's the deal--and I know I am the odd man out, here, but I'll give it to you straight. I have bought and sold three of these. The concept and the promise is a tremendously alluring. And the aesthetics are incredible. There's something about the cane front, that piping, and the clean-line lettering of "T E C H 21" that makes me salivate, but I keep selling these because this amp does not do clean--at all. If you're into any variey of distorted tones, from the little-bit-more-than-just-mildly-overdriven to the massively distorted, you'll be more than happy. But if you want to play clean--even on occasion--forget it. The Tweed setting will get you closer, but it's anemic comapred to the other settings, and all one has to do is do a quick A/B with a real Fender amp to see that the clean one was getting with the TM10 wasn't really clean at all. For overdriven and distorted sounds, I would think this amp should get a 10. But if you have some idea that you would like to play clean sometime, you'd better look elsewhere.
Reliability
:No Opinion
Musicians Friend, from whom I bought one of the three of these that I have owned, has a nasty habit of shipping these--counter to the recommendations of Tech21NYC--in the display box. That the amp can survive that speaks to its durability, I believe.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
I wrote them an e-mail that they never responded to, but I don'y know if that is an indication of what customer service is like. Others have had much better experiences than I have, so I will reserve judgment.
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $230
Submitted 03/22/2004
at 10:18pm
by Richard Carey
Email: gear at richardcarey<dot>com
Features
:9
For complete features check their website or the other reviews. That said, this amp has everything you could possibly ask for in an amp of this class and pricerange.
Sound Quality
:10
Awesome. I mainly use the Fender and Marshall amp settings, and use the full gamut of "Mod" settings (affect the amp character, ie extra poweramp tube setting "hot" etc), and I myself always use the British speaker setting.
The EQ knobs are very sensitive like most Tech21 products, so you'll find a million sounds but will need to take the time to find the sound you want.
Like I said I don't use the Mesa setting. I find the British setting to be very accurate in sounding like various Marshalls, and combined with the MOD switch you can get most Marshall sounds over the last 20 years.
Same for the fender sound. Also, in-between the two you can coax out a pretty great Hiwatt tone too.
This amp is just absolutely phenominal sounding. I use it for practice and recording. I mic the amp using a large diaphragm condenser. It has become my main recording amp, and I've recorded everything from huge all-tube 100w heads driving marshall 4x12 cabinets to 1x12 boutique tube combos. This amp has the tone. Despite having a relatively small 8" speaker, the amp has wonderfull tight bottom end on palm mutes and the like. It translates across as a wonderfully resonant, chunky cabinet sound when miked properly. I can't say enough good things about this amp. My larger, tube amps will come and go, but this one will stay. Invaluable as a practice amp and recording amp.
(ps. i cannot comment on the direct recording, but I have heard people say it is somewhat inferior to POD's and the like. Most good producers will tell you, mic your amp. If you can afford to do so, you'll be very pleased with your results on this amp).
Also, this does sound much better than the digital modelling amps. I have a PodXT as well, and while it's great, the tone is somewhat cold and harsh. The trademark 10 does "model" but it's all analog and the distortion is warm and smooth.
Reliability
:No Opinion
I bought it new... no problems yet. Seems very well made though I don't ever mistreat my gear or move it around much, so it'll probably remain here in the studio for it's life.
Customer Support
:10
I've emaield them a couple times for various things like manuals, etc. Always quick to reply and friendly.
Overall Rating
:10
Excellent value. More expensive than other "practice" amps, but this one is more than a "toy" practice amp; it's a full-blown boutique-level recording combo. Top notch, and this is from a guy with tube Marshalls, and now a Soldano.
Product: Tech 21 Trademark 10 Price Paid: US $169.99
Submitted 03/22/2004
at 05:52pm
by Matt J
Email: mattjennjesse<at>insightbb dot com
Features
:9
The feautures are great. The 3 character switches allow you to dial in just about any type of sound you want. My only gripe is the inability to switch sounds with a footswitch.
Sound Quality
:10
I am using a Samick Wolfgang Style guitar with a Dimarzio Tone Zone bridge humbucker and this amp sounds amazing! I play a variety of music from 80's metal (AC/DC, Dokken) to modern rock (3 Doors Down, Collective Soul, King's X, Fuel, P.O.D.) and it works great for all of it. I mainly use this amp for direct recording and jamming in my home studio. I have owned all of the modeling amps and preamps including the POD Pro, J-Station, Genesis 3, Valve FX, AX2, and a ton of others and this has a more natural sound than any of them. Most modeling devices always seem to lack something in crispness or tonal quality, but the Sansamp sounds more like a real amp than any digital modeler I have tried.
The built in speaker is astonishingly good for being an 8" speaker, but this amp really came alive when I plugged it into my Fender HM-212 cabinet. I think the Marshall sound is the most authentic of the bunch. It has the right combination of chunky bass and sizzling highs to give you that heavy Marshall sound. The amp is not very loud on clean sounds, but I was amazed at how loud this amp could be plugged into a cabinet with the gain and volume cranked to about 8. Wow! The loudest 10 watts I have ever heard. It is loud enough to play with a drummer if you are playing heavy distortion and through a cabinet. This amp is versatile enough to record clean guitar, chunky rhythm, singing lead, and even thumping bass. If you are looking to get into home recording, this is the best money you could spend. Buy one of these and throw a chorus pedal and digital delay into the effects loop and you are set. I am giving this a 10 based on bang for the buck! I have played $1,000 amps that didn't get me as excited to plug in and play as this amp.
Reliability
:No Opinion
Haven't had it long, but it seems well built. The red jewel light doesn't always come on, but it doesn't effect the performance of the amp at all.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Haven't dealt with them yet.
Overall Rating
:9
I have been playing for about 16 years and have been through tons of gear in that time. I have bought and sold thousands of dollars in equipment in just the last year. I love to buy stuff on ebay, try it out for a while, and then resell it if I don't like it. This is one of the only things I have bought that I am not planning to sell. I will keep this amp no matter what else I come across. It works great for recording direct or just jamming and practicing. These sell on ebay for 150-180 bucks all the time. I got mine brand new for 169 on ebay! If you have around 200 bucks to spend on an amp, please don't waste your money on a Crate, Peavey, or even the smaller Marshall. In this price range nothing else even comes close. If you have more than 200 bucks then I would buy this amp and a cabinet before I would buy another amp. The channel switching is the only gripe. If you wanted to use it live that would be a major problem. The Trademark 60 and 120 have channel switching, but I don't think they sound the same as the 10. Go figure! For live use I am thinking about going with the PSA-1 preamp or maybe the Trademark 300 head. I also own the GT2 pedal, and it sounds great too.