Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/05/2006
at 03:58pm
by John
Features
:No Opinion
When we invest money in something we tend to invest emotionally too. This can make it difficult at first to determine if the thing is actually worth all the hope and cash- especially if we find there are features that we like mixed in with things we don't.
I have mixed feelings about this guitar (Variax 600). First - the body is largely a $100 guitar. I have seen better cheap guitars out there.
The action is low but the strings are mysteriously 'tight' and feels like a guitar would if it had been tuned up to an open A. The neck is maple and should be fast, but it is not. It is a struggle to play fast on this instrument - due to the string tension. Perhaps a lighter guage set would work (a 9 on the first e instead of 10 etc)
Sound
:7
For the most part I love the sounds even if they sound largely fake - I find the sounds have their own validity, so I prefer not to try and compare them with the guitars Line 6 claims they sound like. There is a freedom in this.
Unfortunately I am baffled as to why when I use the 1/4 output eith with the power-supply or direct into an amp, the signal fades and sometimes disappears altogether. This doesn't happen with the digital cable - just with the regular audio cable. I am so new to the guitar that I am wondering if there is something I am doing wrong, but hey, it should work without problems.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:No Opinion
As I said earlier: The action is low but the strings are mysteriously 'tight' and feels like a guitar would if it had been tuned up to an open A.
Sadly I feel like this guitar could fall apart really easily. There is a cheapness about the body that I would ordinarily reject out of hand if it were a regular guitar.
Reliability/Durability
:No Opinion
I think the guitar will hold up in live situations as well as the next cheapo guitar but I would never go to a gig without a backup guitar. I simply do not trust this product much beyond the living room.
Customer Support
:1
Well I have written to Line 6 a few times and I am not in the least suprized that they have not written back..duh... Like soooo many companies these days Line 6 has moved away from serving the customer to serving itself!!
Overall Rating
:5
I have been playing a long time and overall I think the general quality of guitars have improved much, especially in the lower price range. However, Line 6 has managed to package a great computer in a piece of driftwood and call it good. I would be considerably more impressed if Line 6 upgraded to installing their clever computer into a Woolworths guitar...heheh
Still, bad bodies and necks aside, I still love the range of tonality - especially the open tunings, 12 string and accoustic models. I don't know a whole lot about Martins or Gibsons and cannot tell the difference between a 57 strat and a Fender CBS 70's clunker, and I don't care either as long as it sounds good. Overall the Variax sounds ok and is brilliant in what it can do, but I am not convinced that they are a totally serious or reliable guitar.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: 300 (uk pounds)
Submitted 12/02/2005
at 03:29pm
by variax 300 ex-user
Features
:8
Good on features- loads of guitar sounds to choose from (if that is what you want?)
Sound
:7
some sounds more authentic than others- depends what model you compare against. Think "jack of all trades..."
Action, Fit, & Finish
:6
not a bad set up. a little tweak here and there to get a more lower action. a couple of frets not level so watch out you who like a real low action!
Reliability/Durability
:4
got a problem with the selector switch from new.
Studio use- yes
live- too much to wrong me thinks!
Customer Support
:1
quick support and return of product.
got a free "ding" in the guitar-neck which added unwanted character- thanks line6.
Oh, and they didnt fix the fault or put the guitar back together properly!
Overall Rating
:3
I have no confidence in this product for a live instrument.
ok for studio where you have time on your side but i'd prefer to stay with a basic/simple/standard set of electrics instead of the more volatile CPU based guitar
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: 1180 Euros (Too expensive)
Submitted 05/08/2005
at 02:06am
by Anonymous
Features
:8
Everybody knows now... My Variax is a 500, bought in july 2003 - the price was TWICE at this time... Argl!
Good natural resonance with the alder body but the sound is not NICE: unplugged, there's a reminiscent focused metallic high frequency (4khz)... Bling, bling... The finish of the alder body is not that good: you can see the limits between the three parts of wood through the black paint.. the pots are already rusted... Playability good enough.
Sound
:8
Well, here is an update of my previous review:
- You have to know that you just CAN'T compare the Variax and its "real" models without some tricks, because the Variax doesn't emulate all the vintage electric axes named in the manual: what the Variax reproduces, in EVERY case, is a vintage electric guitar THROUGH A 20 FEET CABLE! Nobody never says and everyone seems to ignore that the lenght of a cable plugged after some passive pups DEFINES the tone: the high cut filter shifts down of 1khz (mimimum) each time you add 10 feet to your cable... So, if you want to compare the Variax and a real Strat/LP/ Tele etc., USE A STANDARD 20 FEET CABLE. With this trick, you'll hear that the tones are pretty close... The problem is that most of the hobbyist guitarists use SHORT cables, which rise the frequency resonance of their passive pups... Then they say that the tone of the Variax is muffled... Now, it's true that this FIXED parameter is a PROBLEM with the Variax. People at Line 6 should do something... But maybe they had a reason to do that (see below).
- Another advice: don't judge too fast the Strat tone of the Variax. They've choosed a 1959 model: the pups were overwound at this time . A 1958 or a 1964 Strat HAS NOT the same tone, not to mention the CBS models or the modern reeditions... So, don't say that the Strat clone of the Variax is not accurate... Or be honest enough to compare it to a REAL 1959 model (plugged in a 20 feet cable).
- Now, the Variax is not perfect: the acoustic tones are useable, even if they sound synthetic and "piezo" (this color added by the transducer is not worst than with my Takamine); the Hollow body models are good... but you can approximate their resonance with a solid body and the "Guitar sim" provided in the Boss GT8; the electric models are good enough with a clean or a slightly crunch tone; their distorsion is REALLY less convincing: with an high gain settings, a "hiss" takes the place of the "hum"; the distorsion erases the differences between the models and enhances the piezo "clock-clock".
- This piezo sound, ALWAYS there in EVERY tone, is the big problem of the axe. Sometimes, I live with it. Sometimes, I find it unbearable. I still believe that this parameter explains the choice of a "20 feet cable" type of tone: it masks a bit the natural sound of the piezo. The other flaw of such a transducer is that it LACKS OF DYNAMIC! I've played a PRS Soapbar II some weeks ago: what a difference!! The "Les Paul Junior" model of the Variax sounded lifeless, neutral, flat, blank... With my real Les Paul and my real Strat, same thing: the overall color is the same (through a 20 feet cable). But the natural biting attack of magnetic pups is not there with the Variax. You have the piezo "clock" instead.
Sum up: I'm still happy with the wide range provided by my Variax. But I'm not really seduced by ANY electric model among its 25 tones. This is definitively a second guitar. These days, I use the axe mostly for its acoustic sounds, more versatile and useable in studio than my Takamine (even if it stays more synthetic)...
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
See above
Reliability/Durability
:8
See above.
Customer Support
:1
I've sent some questions and never had any answer.
Overall Rating
:8
I don't know if I would buy it a second time: I've played it a lot, searching THE tone, finding sometimes a good sound, but I can't say that I've had a real moment of pleasure with it. It's a useful piece of gear, a TOOL. It's REALLY not the holy graal. I dream about a modeling guitar with MAGNETIC pups AND a piezo transducer...
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: US $549
Submitted 04/29/2005
at 12:19pm
by Dan Gauss
Features
:10
V500 Sunburst.
Lot's and lot's of tones (models).
Sound
:9
Suits the many styles I like to play. Metal, Classic Rock, Blues, Bluegrass, Acoustic. I've noticed that to get the full effect of the various models, you must use a full range amp. I use mine with a POD 2 through a Roland 40watt KB amp with excellent results. The raw guitar sounds good not plugged in and when played through a full range amp, the models all come to life.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
My first model needed the model selector calibrated. The Line 6 service centers tech was out on vacation so the price matched the offer I got at Guitar Center and I got beutifully set up sunburst. The fretboard was a tad on the dry side but a little lemmon oil fixed that right up. Truss needed minor adjusting to resolve some buzzing. Action was spot on for my style and comparable to my 61 LP Custom.
Reliability/Durability
:9
The guitar has a solid feel and the finish is nice. I replaced the strap buttons with strap locks as is my standard operating proceedure.
Customer Support
:10
Called Line 6 to figure out the model control issue. Call was answered in under 5 minutes. Staff kew exactly what was wrong and set up service center repair. Was off the phone in under 5 minutes.
Overall Rating
:10
I'm 43 and have been playing guitar since I was 13. I've owned some of the modeled guitars over the years and still own a Strat and LP. This guitar feels good in my hands - like a cross between my Strat and LP. Since I fot the V500 I really haven't played the others much at all.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 03/15/2005
at 05:06am
by Timmy
Features
:9
tons of fetures
as stated nylon string would be good.
k most will know what it does, its a guitar, that pretends to be other guitars
Sound
:6
nope...... just no....... its so wrong....... how to describe it.....
can't add much. sterile sounding, unpredictable changes with the toggle switch. can't palm mute (my main problem). has sound. lacks playability. but the thing i hate. and i mean hate, is that once you put even little bits of distortion, or overdrive, it starts to honk, and badly. the sounds are aproxamate, but there is a diffrence, the strat sound is worse than my $50 strat copy i got in china, if that is a pointer. and again with litle bits of od dist, the 'guitars' loose their character, and sound like honky crap. clean is much better, i never play it with any amount of gain, it hates my tube amps.
i have a parker P38 which i got for a similar price, and i think it is way more versitile; in short i have a humbucker sound, single coil sound, and a pizo which i can blend with the magnetic, or have alone. i can also split the signal to 2 amps, (mag and pizo)
the variax has nothing on any of my guitars in terms of sound, and as far as sounding like the real thing, i think they are haveing a laugh. listen to the 12 string and the resonators, and you should understand.
if you don't then, what the hell, yea why not.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:4
what a joke!!!!! try keeping it in tune, i have never had problems like this with tuneing. i can hear it slipping, i have done every thing, and it just won't stay in tune.
now the goddam thing is falling apart!
Reliability/Durability
:1
thats it "i'm afraid its going to fall apart,"
Oh wait it has fallen apart.
First the strap button came off.
then the model selector switch came off in my hand (and no i didn't pull it off)
then the 1/4 jack, fell into the guitar, and i had to retreive it (though that was my fault) but then the wire came loose and i re solderd it back on, and it was fine after that
but i opened it up to fixed every thing. voiding my garentee, which ment i was completly stuffed when it gave up completly, i had no idea what is wrong, with it, all wires in place, took it to be fixed but it they couldn't figure out what was wrong. Can't get a replacement, can't get it fixed!
Customer Support
:2
don't make me laugh! Try buy something and they are very helpful, as soon as you have a problem your on your own. they are not at all honest about their products.
Fainally any one who has signed up for the free rifftracker software and tryed to unsubscribe before the free trial period ends will know what i am talking about. but at least they are there, so a 2
Overall Rating
:5
takeing into acount that i'm the only one who's variax has simply lost the will to live, i accept that i am a special case. but i was never that impressed with it in the first place, and whats worse, now i can't sell it to some unsuspecting, tone deaf idiot. Because it won't even make a sound.
who ever gives this a 10 ina ny catogory is dreaming or just stupid.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: 400 (GBP)
Submitted 02/11/2005
at 07:57am
by Anonymous
Features
:8
Pretty cool idea.
could have had more models (eg nylon string, baratone models, stuff like that) especially as the majority of the others are dissapointing.
easy to use, the amp you use is very important, i have used it in every situation i can think of, and the diffrence can be phanomonal.
Sound
:5
Well it could be pretty convincing, if it wern't so sterile sounding. try to mute, or make the guitar wail, scream, and you will be extreamly dissapointed. clean is ok, you can hear the pizo element and clicking of the pick against the strings, fingers rubbing the strings is accuntuated on a pizo pickup. (tho i don't find this a problem as i have 2 other guitars with pizo's, so i am used to it) but the signals are weak sounding, there are volume changes between settings some so much so that changeing on the fly is just not plausable. not only that but to get a good sound out of each model you need to do a lot of 'tweeking' of settings on pedels etc, so unless you have some digital modeling system where you can just switch a bank, then every time you flick the switch you could end up doing a lot of tapdancing with pedels, or usualy just end up sounding like some muppity plastic pop band.
the Guitar is cheap, and the inherant tone is awful, (just strum it unpluged) and for this kind of money i would expect more, (yes i know you get the computer system and everything, but for less cash i got a fender jaguar, and with that i can do much more than this).
the 'sounds' are ok they dont convince me, that plus the sterility, and the other limitations ,dosen't much like distortion(i never go past 3 [i.e i never use very much]) and this thing plus a chorus pedel is a complete ringing disaster', palm muting sounds like you turned the volume down, and so this should demonstrate just how expressonless this guitar is (it dosent respond to your playing style like a real guitar).
one of the first lessons most people learn when they start the guitar is that 'jerry garcia (to be honest i don't really know who he is so sorry about any spelling) sounded like jerry Garcia, nomatter what guitar he played.' my point being that guitaring isn't just about 'sound', you need tone, and most importantly style (which for me includes expression in your playing).
That said I wouldn't recomend this guitar to any one. as i think it would kill your playing style and only hinder the development of your guitaring skills. its all just a matter of opinion, and that is mine. I could see how it would be usefull for a cover band, but i still think the compramise you make is too great.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:7
It was set up nicely, and everyting.
the tuners are not good.
the torque of the vol and tone knobs is diffrent (small point but it drives home just how cheap this guitar is, line 6 must be making a killing)
the 5 way switch is really cheap and feel loose.
the moddel selector switch fells like it will fall off.
of the guitars i saw (sunburst) many had inconsistancies in the finishes) includeing mine.
no problems with the neck (personal thing)
Reliability/Durability
:7
seems ok, don't like the fact that my guitar needs to be pluged into the mains to work. batry life is a joke, so never forget the power, or you will be left standing as it dosen't work with out it, (as well as being exclusive, and expencive and somtimes difficult to replace)the exterior of the guitar seems like it could fall apart at amy moment.
Customer Support
:1
well they seem to either be great, or complete twats. my experiance was the latter. but worth a try i guess, bit like a lottery. In genral i have noticed that their products suck. as said in other reviews, i also believe they spend more on marketing than anything else (Do you think permission to use the original names was cheap?), shearly as their products suck, and if they didn't they wouldn't be anywhere, (just look at pop music, they pay for it to go on tv and the raido, then it sells itself till people realize it sucks, by which time there is something else) can you tell i was a radio DJ?:
after readign what they say about the variax, i just couldn't believe a word they say. either they are just musically incompatant, or (more lightly) just money weasels.
Overall Rating
:5
to be honest i don't consider this a guitar. it is a pourper. I hear of people wanting mass line 6 product burning and whilst i don't wish any one any harm, i guess i would join in the fun (as i do resent the fact that line 6 products are takign over stores world wide, pushing out the quality products). I haven't herd a good line 6 product ever and i don't know what posesed me to get this, now i feel like a right plonker. and i guess i would like to get my money back, but it is too late for that. I just wonder how many people who buy their stuff have actually listend to the real things? not many i would presume. i would rather spend the equivilent amount of cash on an original product that actually does what the manufacturers say. just like pop music, market to the young, dumb and mindless (like me i guess) and you are garenteed to make $hite loads of money, we're all suckers. People allways want more for their money, but is more really more when everything you get just sucks?
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: 500 (?) used
Submitted 02/03/2005
at 12:52pm
by Anonymous
Features
:8
2004 built black Variax 500. Please read all the other reviews about the features.
Sound
:5
I thought it would be nice having that Variax for practising at home. So I bought one. As long I played it through my Guitarport, it sounded nice. Plugged in my VOX AD30VT I was wondering about the crappy sound, that came out. I tried to adjust the Vox. things became better bat not good. For hours I was trying and comparing with a Tele and a Strat. But the Sound still kept unsatisfying. The next day at the rehearsel room had the same result. All the sounds were synthetic, but not closed to the originals.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
Well made for a Korean guitar. Had to make some adjustment to meet my needs. The tuners could be better.
Reliability/Durability
:8
For me it would have been just a backup for my main guitars for live playing. But it seems to be solid enough for some gigs. I would change the tuners.
Customer Support
:10
I had some problems with another Line6 product and the guys were very helpful, friendly and reacted very fast.
Overall Rating
:5
I am playing for 25 years now and playing one gig a month.
My other gear: Fretking Corona 50 (strat copy by Wilkinson), Morgaine Chopper (Tele Copy by master luthier Jorg Tandler), Dr.Z Carmen Ghia mini stack, VOXAD30VT, Voodoo Sparkle Drive, Boss DD3.
I love the idea of having a guitar with this incredible flexibility. But unfortunately the sounds do not get close the originals at all. Maybe it will be better with the Variax Workbench Software, when you can create your own guitar sounds.
The Variax idea is about great vintage guitar sounds and this is its weak point. It does not deliver convincing sounds, which are close to the vintage originals. But most of the guitar players are looking for that last 5% of sound to make there (vintage)sound dreams come true. And this guitar gives you maybe 75%...
I sold mine on eBay.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 02/02/2005
at 02:40am
by Anonymous
Features
:8
this is about the 500
Read bleow...
only an 8 due to unimmaginitive choice of guitars moddled, missing a nylon sting as well as some others. and the actual guitar itself is nothing special, and sounds bad unpluged (to me this is a sign of a cheap guitar).
I think it would be much better if they made it with magnetic pickups, (as well as the pizo) then you could that an electric and an acustic at the same time (like a parker)
Sound
:6
Ok well it kinda sounds like the guitars moddled, but i work in a guitar shop and so spend all my days playing all the guitars moddled and am sad enough to have sat down with the manual and compared all the guitars, and It unquestionable that the varix only sounds slightly like each one (70% i think is about right though i would say about 60%). When you take into account the weak signals, the pizo element, and the sterility and genral expressonlessness of the variax. WHY is this a problem? It wouldn't matter if line 6 where honest about their products, in which case i would say good on them for pushing guitarists into the future. but after spending large amounts of time with their products and reading their hype, i (along with many other people) have come to the decision that its all just blatent and total lies. Like it says on the advert here on HC 'just turn the knob and BELIEVE'. well i believe that i can play like jimi hendrix, but my freiends (and I ) know that is not true. the only way this sounds like the guitars moddled is if you BELIEVE it does. I think Line6 are haveing a good old laugh at every one, as they have proved that with enough marketing it is possable to convince people that their substandard products sound like the most expencive butique ones. If this was the case don't you think everyone would be useing their crap? CRAP being the operitive word.
there is a constant stream of people returning thses to the shop and selling them on ebay. I wonder why? when will people realize that guitaring is not just about sound, it is also about style, one of the first lessons you learn (or should), this guitar is so sterile that it is pretty much expressonless, (try playing the blues on it). whats more, i have herd and made recordings of the variax, i have herd it played live, and the first thing my musically diabolical friend said to me was that 'guitar sounds like a guitar trying to be another guitar' (his english is not so good but i understood what he was saying) it just sounds phoney. I spend the day with a variax and a 8 track and made 2 recordings of the same song, when i played it to my band members they immediatley picked out the variax recording, it was the first one i played and they simply laughed at it, (as they thought i had used midi).
also it dosent go well with even slight amounts of distortion or indeed, most effects i have tryed, (get kind of ringing overtones, the become really annoying). on some that i played there were problems with digital clipping (especially on the jazzbox settings). The 12 string banjo and sitar are just plain stupid and sound nothing at all like the real thing.
to be honest this is simply the worst guitar i have ever played. (my first electric was a $50 strat copy from china, and that compares favourably to this)
i read a comment somewhere else (i was pretty intrested in this guitar) that 'if you like this guitar then i think you don'T know guitaring'
it is kinda harsh and extreame but i think lots of sounds is no substitute for the ability to express i.e. make the guitar sing, scream, wail etc, this is impossable on the variax and i say beware as this guitar could well kill you style, (which is ok if you wish to be in a crappy pop band opr rip off other people)
Action, Fit, & Finish
:5
sounds awful unplugged.
really bad tuners.
havent seen one yet that dosent have an inconsistant finish on it.
the selecter switch is cheap,
the tone and vol knobs have diffrent torques, the moddel selecter switch feels and looks like it could fall off at any time.
Reliability/Durability
:6
dont ever loose the power supply.
never owned one so cant really comment but i have owned line6 pods and these have failed me on sevral occasions, and this is just a cheap guitar with a computer in it so i wouldn't make it my only guitar, (infact i would never use it ever).
Customer Support
:1
'Good coustmer suport starts with honesty'
well Line 6 is immediatly a 1 as they are everything but honest (just read what they say about thier products then use them and you should know what i mean the fact is no one expects it to sound exactly like what they moddel, but they say it does and that is just a bunch of lies). from my dealings with them their primary concern is money, your money and how they can get it. Dont think so?
why is it that they try and make their products so they don't work withanything else (i talk mostly about the foot switches and power supplies) they change the shape of the podxt ever so slightly so that it wont fit in the old pod bags. It is not a major point but i think it says alot about the motivation of the compney (money). but they are on to a real money spinner here. think about it, you pay through the nose for line6 (digital) gear, after some time its problems become apparent, and hay presto there is an upgrade you can download off the net (for a price ofcourse)but it dosent come with the dam thing does it, hell no.
Line 6 need to be taught a lesson. (hell mc donalds only started makeing CHICKEN mc-nuggets with REAL CHICNKEN after bad publicity)
Overall Rating
:5
Line 6 is pushing the future of guitar sound, yes, but they have lost sight of the essence of guitaring in their endlss pursuit of sound. and so it seems have many guitarists. (just read rave reviews below)
i have been playing since i was 7, i have worked in a guitar shop for over 20, i have played just about everything, and I would never recomend this to anyone, and is in my opinion the worst guitar i have ever come across.
some one needs to stop line6 they are takeing advantage of stupid people. That makes them a pretty mean compney in my books.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 07/02/2004
at 12:12pm
by Anonymous
Features
:8
WOW! with the workbench software, this is a dream come true..
Sound
:8
This is the score. I tried this out in a shop and whilst i was very impressed with the sounds this is my main ( and a big gripe)
You cannot palm mute with this guitar. Maybe it was me, maybe it was the amp, situation, whatever...but there wasn't any palm muting going on....no feel. The sounds are amazing, yes, you will never be able to tell the difference in mix with this, but the feel? if i cannot palm mute, this worrys me with other natural nuances with the guitar...
And no, i dont play death metal or heavy metal, or even use distortion that much even.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:6
Nice, nice...looks a bit strange, but thats all personal.
Reliability/Durability
:7
fine
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
The only thing i wanted to comment on here is the palm muting. I do not have a good review here as i dont have much experience. As i said, it sounds amazing..truely...the power of this thing is great, but im worried about it if you cannot palm mute....
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: 540 (Euros)
Submitted 05/06/2004
at 12:56pm
by Rui Cruz
Email: ruip_cruz at yahoo<dot>com
Features
:10
This guitar is feature-packed. No one making a serious attempt at a review for this guitar could possibly give it less than a ten. This is as feature-packed as a guitar gets.
As for the rest of the features, this is a Korean-made, good, solid, no-compromises guitar. It's a no-bull version of a working guitar (no fancy stuff here folks).
The finish is good, I have the black/perloid version which is nicely done and good-looking. Oddly enough it doesn't seem to pick my finger prints as any other of my black guitars, which is a big plus. (for some cosmic reason, all my guitars are black, even when I didn't intended it that way)
The neck is a comfortable c section neck, more than a strat, much more than an Ibanez (obvious, I know). Although it's visibly "chunckier" it doesn't feel that way at all. It's not easy to explain, but I have no other way to put it. It feels like a regular strat neck as in it is not cumbersome at all. Very confortable guitar in all aspects. And its so light.
The tuners are not very good. Really they are not, I'm thinking about replacing them. Anyway, not a big deal, but they "kinda" suck.
The included accessories are fine. Top-notch gig-bag, all the equipment to run it. Excelent work and value pack by Line6. The gig bag must really make a hit in their margin, but is such a nice thing to do in these "lets-cut-everything-that-costs-money" days.
Sound
:9
This guitar is my dream come true. I play mostly at home, I record and compose music of all genres (really) and this guitar was everything that I could hope for. I have an Ibanez 7 String and a modified strat that I love dearly. I had to really force myself to pick them up after three weeks, it was so hard to put the Variax down. I simply didn't feel the need to pick any other guitar.
As an inspiring tool and for music writers and composers, this is a well-oiled factory of ideas. I mean, just turn the knob, and it's there! So many usable sounds.
As far as I'm concerned, all sounds on this guitar are usable, especially in a recording evironment. Coming back from the recording there is NO difference. It's no wonder to me if this thing creeps into every goddamn studio in the world (very much in the way the POD has).
Another advantage is that all Variaxes sound exactly the same... try loosing your 30 year old Les Paul and then replacing it the next day for an EXACT copy of it.... good luck! You may never find another guitar quite like that, EVER. Imagine now that you are halfway through in recording your next album when it gets lost or stolen or (god forbid) broken.
I practice with a band every week and I can't really say that I'd rather take any other guitar to practice. It has everything! Acoustic, solid body, hollow body, jazz, it has it all. No fuss, no feedback, no volume problems, nothing! Everything I need is there, always. In ONE guitar. Rehearsals felt just like moving into another country before the Variax.
Compared to the real deal, I must say that as a Strat user for many years, this was the sound that I was most disapointed with. But I can't really say that it is because of the sound, it's probably from the "feel" of the guitar being different than from anything else. The sounds that come from the guitar are real, are solid, very musical and very inspirational. I can't bring myself to believe that someone has picked this guitar up and was not amazed, or at least impressed. The hard truth is that this guitar has NO competition whatsoever.
Pros:
- All the sounds are very professional sounding with no or little tweaking;
- All the model guitars are very good aproximations of the real deal (the feel isn't obvously there, but you have to play it, no new guitar can ever compare to one that has been played for thousands of hours for years and years)
- The comfort of having an acoustic model and any electric model at hand with the same guitar is incredible.
- Unless you have money falling out from your pockets as you walk down the street and (let's not forget us, married men) a LOT of space to spare, this is THE only solution, period.
- When the new computer interface is out I will buy one IN THE SAME DAY. Imagine that you could design your own guitar... is that amazing or what?
- COMPLETELY noiseless.... completely. I forget that the guitar is on and with a full volume all the time. In front of the computer! Nothing short of amazing. Try doing that with a strat... pfft... Not even in the same house almost, let alone in front of the computer.
Cons:
- The models do have the acoustic component imbeded into the sounds and I find that this problem is worse in some models than in others, however, a curious thing happened as I'm hearing these "component" frequencies in "regular" guitars... so maybe it's something we hadn't noticed before. I'm curious as to if someone else has felt this (you can email me at will about this as I would love to discuss this with someone else).
- The knob is a bit flimsy and sometimes when changing guitars it will not work in a positive way, meaning that sometimes you'll wonder if you have indeed changed the guitar or not, or worse, be sure you haven't.
- The tuners aren't really that good. And now I feel that the guitar has the right price (around 500 euros) but 1000 Euros for this guitar?? Forget it! The Japanese version seems so much better.
- As a
Action, Fit, & Finish
:9
The guitar setup was fine, but the action was set very high. The neck, however, was setup very well, the relief was spot on. Just had to adjust the height of the saddles and I was on my way.
I setup all my new guitars and I really felt that I could save money on this one. Good, solid, professional job. Once again, nothing to write home about, but no compromises. Everything professional. And I think that I'm very picky about setups and action.
As far the finnish is concerned, this guitar is perfect. Very good finnish. Funny thing is that the pictures don't really do it justice, it looks so much better live, it's unbelievable.
For a Korean guitar of this price range? A nine for sure.
Reliability/Durability
:8
I'm certain that this guitar will handle beatifully live.
The hardware seems very solid indeed, and just don't kick it around, it has computers inside, so don't go Yngwie on it, if you know what I mean.
The finnish is perfect and will last for a long, long time.
I would depend on this guitar absolutely. But the good thing is that it is so easy to get a spare, you'd be stupid not to get another one if you play professionally. And remember, it will sound EXACTLY the same as your other Variax.
No sure about the knob and the tuners are not very good.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never dealt with them, and I own a LOT of Line 6 material. If that doesn't tell you something, I don't know what will. Excelent Internet site and support there. Good, solid, vibrant community of users.
Overall Rating
:10
The question of how many years I've been playing, as anyone who plays the godamn things will tell you, means JACK. This is the most stupid question there is. I play for fifteen years. What does that tell you? That's right, SQUAT!
I don't play professionally, but I play hard, many hours and I record a lot. I rehearse regularly and perform maybe ten times a year. If you were a professional, you'd say I play "pretty good", but in a condescending kind of way.
I don't have the least bit of regret of buying it. I would buy it again, and again. As I said, no one can seriously say that they would buy another guitar instead, because it would not compare. There is, simply put, no other guitar like it. To say that you would buy a Les Paul instead?? What does that mean? It's the same as saying that you would buy an Ibanez Jem instead of a Guild Jazzbox... How does that compare??!?
I love Line6, and I think that they are doing now what Leo Fender and Les Paul and Mr Gibson did 50 years ago. They are kicking ass, they are in the forefront of their business, they clearly have the initiave to which everybody else is responding, and their products are good all round, consistently good. Solid built, good quality and feel and professional sounding. ALL of them.
People talk about "passion" and "feel" and "love for the instrument". I have all of that, and then some, and I don't believe for a second that anyone that builds and devises these things is nothing short of a complete nut for guitars and guitar playing in general.
If you only need one sound to do your thing, don't buy this, buy the best guitar for your thing that money can buy. If you need a vast array of guitars, that are equally confortable to play, sound excelente with ZERO noise or feedback and that you can take in ONE guitar case, or this case (no pun intended) a gig bag, buy one today. At 500 euros there is almost no reason not to buy one.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: 649 (gb#)
Submitted 04/25/2004
at 01:42pm
by Anonymous
Features
:10
Made in 2003, this one was black with a black pearloid scratch plate and a maple neck. Came with a footswtitch, power supply, stereo lead (for powering the guitar using the footswitch) and a very nice gig bag. 5 way selector switch and a pretty good manual. Load of technical wizardry - hence the 10.
Sound
:9
12 string models sounded like a six string being played through a chorus pedal. Apart from that, the models all sounded fine - the sitar was brilliant (when I was trying it in the shop, I played the intro to paint it black by the stones and it turned every head in the shop). Most impressive thing of all was that on the Les Paul model, if you selected the neck pickup, the volume actually increased as you strummed closer to the neck!
Action, Fit, & Finish
:7
Finish was ok - nothing brilliant (you have to remember this is a cheap guitar with some expensive computer parts inside). The action was fairly low and the neck was neutral - somewhere between a strat and a les paul - although closer to the strat as it was unlaquered.
Reliability/Durability
:8
Seemed tough enough to me
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never found out
Overall Rating
:6
Don't really know why I felt I needed it. Already owned a Rick 330, a strat and at that time a 2002 Les Paul Standard. Have been playing for 15 Years and use an Engl Screamer 50 Watt tube amp. When playing in the shop, had it connected to a Marshall Blues Breaker and a Marshall Acoustic amp for the accoustic models and had no problems. When I got home however, all of the models sounded like a normal electric guitar. This is when I discovered that my amp needs to be pushed a little to get the best out of the models which caused a problem as an Engl is a VERY LOUD amp and cannot be pushed in a home environment and doesn't come with a headphone switch. This rendered the variax virtually useless for me as I couldn't listen to it without buying another amp simply for this guitar. After much deliberation I actually sold the guitar on ebay and used the money to upgrade my les paul to a custom which sounds superb whatever you do with the amp! Main problem with the guitar is that although it sounds close to the guitars it models, you don't get the feel of the guitar - a les paul custom is a pleasure to play, whereas this was like playing a low range Ibanez. Also, it felt weird playing an electric and hearing an accoustic! Overall, this is a nice idea, but it didn't work for me.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: US $995 & 495
Submitted 02/03/2004
at 09:15am
by V.
Features
:9
Variax - 500...I now have two. Sunburst and Black. G Center had blow-out sale and I couldn't resist.
You all know how it's made and what it does...Some others have mentioned alternative models, (eg. mandolin and bass). If I could swap the banjo for a bass, or mandolin model, I would. My personal favorites are the Gretsch 6120, the Tele(s) and the Epiphone Casino models, but I have no problems with the other choices.
Sound
:10
The Variax is just a whole bunch of fun. I play the Variax predominantly through the PodXT. The Pod allows me to match the amps, and effects with the Variax models. I first purchased the PodXT in May '03. I discovered, (and purchased), my first Variax within a couple of weeks of that. Sounds geeky, but my Variax models along with the Pod settings are now on a spread sheet. The real fun part is once I feel like I have a sound down, I wind up drilling down even more. A total "work in progress." Some of my "real" electric guitars are a '73 Gibson ES-335, '82 Rickenbacker 360-12, and a neat NAFTA Tele. I love playing each, but it's much more fun twisting a frickin' knob than pulling guitar bags out of closets, and re-tuning when I'm looking for a sound. I think my hearing has survived the years pretty well, and I don't hear a great deal of diffence between the "real" tones and the modeled ones. I also enjoy playing the acoustic models "straight" through the P.A., or through the POD.
By the way, having two Variax guitars, I was very pleased to find that the sounds coming from both guitars was identical. (I'm thinking that I'll try setting them up with different types and guages of strings...)
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
I thought my first Variax was put together well. (I had to mess with intonation a bit, but not much). My second Variax, however, came out of the box ready to go. I have a Sunburst and a Black Variax. Both are real solid. The finish on both is fine. Everything seems put together fine. I've had no problems with the mechanics or the electronics...
Reliability/Durability
:10
Since purchasing my first Variax in June '03, I have played it almost exclusively. I've recorded seven new songs with it since then. The Variax was used for all of the guitar sounds, (acoustic and electric), on these recordings. For all the playing I've done on it, the Variax shows no sign of wear.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
I'm hoping that I will never have to contact them.
Overall Rating
:10
Well, thank goodness I don't have to support myself by playing music for a living. However, I've been playing for over 30 years and right now I can't wait to get home to turn on the P.A., the PodXT and fire up my "new" Variax to make a little more music and maybe drill down to a new sound I've been working on. I'll be back recording another song soon and when I do, I'll probably be tempted to use one of my "real" guitars on the recording. Truth is though, by that time I'll have some new sound combination, (Variax/PodXT), that I'll want to pull off of the spreadsheet and slap into the mix. Ciao!
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: US $800.00
Submitted 01/30/2004
at 12:13pm
by Gary Ingram
Features
:10
My 2003 black solidbody Line 6 Variax 500 has a 25 1/2 inch scale length, a basswood body, maple neck with a rosewood fingerboard and 22 frets. It is loaded with the features found on the guitars it emulates. The tone and volume knobs and selector switch respond as they would on those guitars. It includes models of a 1960 Fender Telecaster Custom,1968 Fender Telecaster,1968 Fender Telecaster Thinline, 1959 Fender Stratocaster, 1958 Gibson Les Paul Standard, 1952 Gibson Les Paul ?Goldtop?, 1961 Gibson Les Paul Custom (3 PU), 1956 Gibson Les Paul Junior, 1976 Gibson Firebird V, 1955 Gibson Les Paul Special, 1959 Gretsch 6120, 1956 Gretsch Silver Jet, 1968 Rickenbacker 360,1966 Rickenbacker 360-12, 1961 Gibson ES-335, 1967 Epiphone Casino, 1957 Gibson ES-175, 1953 Gibson Super 400, 1959 Martin D-28, 1970 Martin D 12-28, 1967 Martin O-18,1966 Guild F212, 1995 Gibson J-200, 1935 Dobro Alumilite, Danelectro 3021,
Coral/Dano Electric Sitar, Gibson Mastertone Banjo, and 1928 National Style 2 ?Tricone?.
Sound
:10
This guitar sounds like most of my favorite vintage guitars. It is not noisy, and has a as rich and full sound as the guitars it emulates. It has more variety in sound than any other guitar. It records very well. You can play loud onstage. Since there are no pickups, it does not feedback. For live sound I run it into a Mackie 1200 VLS mixer, with a the effects sends running to a Johnson Amplification J Station and Roger Linn Design AdrenaLinn. The outputs from the mixer then go through a Marshall Valvestate V40 amp on the left side and a Rogue GS 100R am on the right. These amps give enough stage volume, nice wide stereo imaging and are then miked into the main PA for the house mix.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:10
My variax 500 has a black finish. It played very well as it was shipped. It took very little to adjust it to my playing preferences. I have not had any problems with this guitar.
Reliability/Durability
:10
This guitar is very dependable, the finish seems to holdup well, the strap buttons are solid. No problems on a gig with the variax 500 as your guitar. It is great to have sound of my favorite guitars withoout having to risk losing the vintage models.
Customer Support
:10
Line 6 is very helpful and return with answers to my questions very quickly.
Overall Rating
:No Opinion
I have played guitar for over 40 years. If thisguitar were ever lost or stolen I would have to find another one. Maybe I'd get a variax 700 the next time. It is going to be expandable with new sounds comming out for it overtime. I wish they would make the nylon string sounds of the new Varriax Acoustic 700 series available for the variax 500 guitars. The link at
http://www.line6.com/VariaxAcousticPreview/#
tells more about the acoustic model. Each guitar has a unique character and feel. The variax gives you alot of sound, playability and tone for the money.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: 1000 (euro)
Submitted 01/29/2004
at 02:19pm
by glenn wassenbergh
Features
:10
This axe was made in 2003 somewhere in the Korea's, they really can produce topquality guitars. It''s a solid top and has a five way multi purpose selectorswitch. Sound is produced thru a piezo bridgesystem and is totally active. Strings are mounted string-thru wise. Tuners non locking and it comes with a case, and a/b switch with powersupply.
Sound
:10
Sound is awesome. I use a Marshall AVT 150 VST 2000 and a Mackie PA when switched to acoustic mode.The guitar is without any noise. Usefull for any kind of music. vanHalen, Shadows,Dire Straits,Crosby Stills,Naish and Young, it's all there. Variety is nearly unlimited.Only likes.O.K you have to get used to the fact that it is a multi guitar in one.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:10
Setup has to be altered to fit your own needs, wich is easy. Did not find any flaws. I do have ather guitars. (A quality stuff, Fender and Custommade Warmoth)
Reliability/Durability
:10
Yes I can and will depend on it without backup if needed, but I do have other guitars. I treat my guitars with care
Customer Support
:10
Customer support is totally O.K. Did have a problem with one of the piezo's and the Dutch representative mr. Ron Huisen, fixed it in no time.
Overall Rating
:10
I've been playing for over fourty years now and I do own a variety of guitars.And yes if lost or stolen I would probably send an APB or wanted DEAD OR ALIVE out to regain my guitar. If that wouldn't help I'd buy a new one. this guitar suits my purpose especially in a coverband it's a "must have".And yes I did compare it with my Fender Telecaster'52 Butterscotch Blonde, and Les Paul All Gold, and Fender Stratocaster Jimi reiss. This Line6 Variax kicks a... . It screams like Eddy and sings like Mark and Hank and so on, and so on.
This might sound a bit corny, but I really like it.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: US $490
Submitted 01/21/2004
at 10:39am
by Davor
Email: pavuna<at>bluewin dot ch
Features
:9
As described by others below.
Sound
:9
Here is definite, detailed test:
In order to help many prospective buyers I have thoroughly tested
my brand new $490 (black) Variax 500. Apparently Geetar Center sells them even for $449, and as you will see at that price some of you may buy it.
So, here we go: I play guitar(s) since 1960, so it's easy for me to feel and hear any shortcomings of any guitar. The Variax 500 is basically $299 Korean made solid state guitar and feels like many other inexpensive Korean guitars, yet my actual guitar sounds very nice dry: lively, ringy, balanced ... pleasure to hear it un-plugged and it's very playable ...
To test the sounds I plugged it (exactly as instructed by Line6) into (arguably the most varsatile, fully class A tube amp) THD Univalve (with 6550a powertube and Fane Vintage 112 cabinet).
The amp is so analog / tube sounding and so natural that it was easy to hear any difference with any of my other guitars ...
So, immediately I heard THE core truth and nothing but the truth:
With a clean amp the Variax 500 sounds basically like any of the guitars it is supposed to emulate BUT WITH mixed 'piezo component' on top. Imagine a jazz guitar sound (like Gibson L-5) and mix with it 40% Fishman or Baggs or RMC piezo sound addition from the bridge =that Variax Jazz guitar sound ...
It was easy for me to discover that as I have a Start Plus with Fishman piezos and RMC Les Paul (used to have Godin LGX-SA too) ... BTW, in a detailed Guitar Player Variax Review issue (summer '03) John McLaughlin also remarked the presence of this piezo sound component (or was it John Scofield?)
I then switched my THD Univalve to early singing bluesy-distorted sound and just used the neck pick-up Variax selection. As I switched from one guitar option to the other I could notice some EQ difference, yet the core tone was
from my fingers ... Here the Variax emulates the guitar of choice yet due to the piezo component (which is constant) the more you enhance the gain the less difference you hear among different guitar models-emulations.
Still, the differences do exist and in some cases (semi & jazz guitars) I really enjoyed the sound and was able to completely forget that I am playing a digital guitar ... that is quite a compliment (from me :-)
Finally, when I added my SansAmp Classic in Marshall-burning mode and used THD Hotplate to create VanHallen-singing metal-gymnastics sounds of the hot-distorted-guitar, it mattered little which setting I
chose on the Variax 500, except obviously for the acoustic settings that tend to sound harsh (even the treble was off on the Variax) ...
On the extreme distortions all setting sound similar yet the sound retains definition better than some Gibson Les Pauls in that mode ...
And the good news is that Variax did sound nice in most settings and there was never any noise or muddiniess, yet the core phenomenon is that the aforementioned piezo-component was always present subtly modulated into the sound. So, my conclusion is:
The Variax sound = Guitar it is supposed to emulate, mixed with 30-40% piezo component
So, should you buy it?
Well, if you want and need many guitars sounds to dial quickly
and can afford $449 - I'd say yes. namely, the guitar is worth $299 and for extra $150 you get great choice of believable EQ of many guitar species that we all like. The thicker the guitar sound (like jazz and semis) the more acceptable is the overall emulation, as piezo component gets lost and you hear it only as a clean-component. On the Strat out-of-phase sounds or any other thin sound guitar the piezo component can appear ''digitalish-sounding'' ... still, it is virtually impossible
not to find at least 10 VERY USABLE sounds in the Variax 500
hence my bottom line is:
If you are VERY purist, stay away.
If you need many sounds fast, can afford $450 - go ahead buy one ... as you will save a lot of time: Rickenbacker can be dialed in VG-88v2 but here it is immediately there and Gibson J-200 is
not far awa
Action, Fit, & Finish
:9
Fine, but not a PRS ...
Reliability/Durability
:9
Seems fine.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Seems fine.
Overall Rating
:9
If you play church shows or in a top-50 cover band or record a lot or are laizy (like me) to tweak VG-88v2 forever and if you have an extra $449 (present price) - then buy one - as long as piezo sound component doesn't bother you.
When you test the guitar make sure that you try THE actual guitar you will bring home, as these are made in Korea and the wood, finish etc may vary and the (dry) sound may differ too ... and that IS important ... overall, I am happy with my purchase.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: US $709
Submitted 01/06/2004
at 12:17pm
by Anonymous
Features
:8
Brand new sunburst model 500. It's nothing to look at, but the electronics are why you buy these things.
Sound
:9
I use the A/B box and run the electric guitar sounds through a Rocktron Replitone, Rocktron Intellifex, ADA power amp and 2 Avatar 2x12 slant cabs loaded with Emminence V30s. The acoustic sounds are run direct into the board via an XLR cord. The sounds are damn close. I've owned several of the guitars modelled and Line 6 has done a great job. They may not be absolutely perfect, but all are usable. I particularily like the Les Pauls and jazz boxes. At first when I played the acoustic sounds, I thought they didn't seem very authentic, but when I recorded them and played them back I was very pleasantly surprised. What you miss when playing the acoustic guitar sims is the feel of guitar vibrating against you. This thing gives you a broad palette to work with.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:7
The guitar itself is definitely a cheapy, but it was setup well and I've gotten used to it's feel. It would never be my main stage guitar, but when I'm recording, it's the one I reach for. Whatever sound I'm looking to put down, is going to be there.
Reliability/Durability
:No Opinion
I don't plan on using this guitar in a live setting.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never tried it.
Overall Rating
:10
Anyone who complains about the models not being perfect is missing the point of the guitar. If you a perfect sound already with your axe you don't need this guitar. If you're like me, and like to have a broad palette of sounds to draw from and can't afford all thes guitars, this thing does the trick. All the models are damn close and very usable. My customized Carvin Bolt will always be my main guitar, but this thing is what I'm cutting almost all of my rythm parts on. For jazz stuff, the jazz boxes can't be beat.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: US $1399.00
Submitted 12/20/2003
at 10:42pm
by Bill
Features
:10
Variax 700 - Made in Japan. 21 Frets, Same as Variax 500 but inlay on neck, better tuners? (Gotoh), tremelo, nicer body.
See the Variax website (Line6.com)
Comes with gig-bag (fairly sturdy) and an a/b switch for going to amp or PA (acoustic models). The switch also powers the guitars electronics, bypassing the batteries.
I have had this guitar for 3 days. I will submit another review if I feel it useful for other guitar shoppers.
Sound
:9
I have played it through a 100 watt Marshall Triple Super Lead with an extension cab. Even though the acoustics would shine better throught my PA, I haven't gotten around to that yet.
The sounds are very, very close to what they are trying to model. I have a Les Paul Standard and an American Strat.
They nailed the Telecasters. I have a 52 reissue and the 1960 Custom in the bridge sounds as good, if not better!! Shit! Very spankin' and twangy.
The 59 Strat is cool also. My Strat sounds more full, but it sounds very close to my friends 64 Strat (yes original). The out of phase (number 2 position) is dead on.
More favs:
58 Les Paul Bridge pos, both Gretsch's, the Jazzbox's are happening, very nice if you don't have the money to go buy these guitars.
The acoustics are pretty good also. My fav is the 59 D-28. Pretty damn close to a real acoustic, even through my Marshall (after I tweaked the tones)
On most all electrics you can do all the dynamic pick scraping, muting, chirping...all that. Anyone who says different, can't play.
BUT, some things sound a little digitized or just plain "diffent" when using the Variax. BUT, it's a compromise that is worth the various sounds you get from this cool chameleon.
Gripes: A small one for now....
The 12 strings sound the least real but have some use. When you do pull offs (Over the hills and far away), it sounds crappy.
But strumming is okay with the 12 string gutiars. The six strings are very good.
Maybe they will have a 6 string bass soon? Better than faking an extra string for every pluck.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:7
I got the 700 because I heard poor reviews on the 500.
Well, even the 700 is not that good. No match for a $1000. guitar. But, like most other reviews, and I agree, you are paying mostly for the technology.
I lowered the action on my 700 and will take the guitar to my guitar repair guy (he's a wizard) to set the trem up so it won't go completely out of tune if you breathe on it.
Reliability/Durability
:8
Seems very sturdy. Everything is solid and built of quality.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Have only had 3 days.
Overall Rating
:9
I've played for 25 years. Rock and blues mostly. Been in a few bands. This guitar would be a great addition for live playing, even some studio applications.
My suggestions for Line6:
Make the 700 (supposedly the deluxe model) of higher quality. Maybe have a slightly flatter neck and a little faster action.
Definitely, have a bass on this. I thought that would be a no brainer!! (hopefully, an upgrade will come with this)
Maybe Line6 could make a little "less" profit and make the 700 model in USA?
Fix the 12 strings pull-off, hammer-on, dynamic modeling.
I liked 90% of the models. Very good 1st run at this Line6.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: 800 (GBP)
Submitted 11/26/2003
at 09:26am
by Martin Aspeli
Features
:9
www.line6.com/variax gives you the lo-down. Quite simply, there's nothing like it. :-)
You may want things like different woods, a trem (the 700 series has one as an option), finishes etc. etc., but for what it tries to be, the feature set is pretty much complete.
Sound
:9
This is where people have a lot of different opinions. I think it all boils down to your attitude; or put differently:
Would you use a POD?
Some people would, some people won't touch it. The Variax is very much the same sort of decision. With the combination of Variax + Pod I can get pretty much any tone I seek. Again, those who've had their AC30 since the 60's and know the difference between putting it on 8 and 8 1/2 may not be convinced; the rest of us are.
I've got a '78 Custom Telecaster, a Taylor 714, a Yamaha Pacifica 112 and a Tanglewood Earth 200 acoustic. I've also owned a Japanese Strat and a Korean Epiphone Casino over the past few years. Am I going to sell the Tele? Nope. Am I going to sell the Taylor? Over my dead body! But the sound out of the Variax is quite simply fantastic. That is especially true through the Pod; I get better results with Variax + Pod than I do with Tele + Pod.
Here comes the second key bit: If you've had your Strat since the early 50's, you pick up a variax and peel your ears, you will be disappointed, just like you would if you picked up one of the new "relic" Strats. But doesn't mean the Variax doesn't sound good on its own. If you really, really want a 50's strat, save up your money and go buy one. If you want a good strat tone, buy a new American strat. If you want a good strat tone, a good tele tone, a good les paul tone, a good ES335 tone and a whole host of other tones, and you don't have the cash to buy one of each, the variax is a blessing.
I put my Tele through a Peavy Classic 30 and compared that to the tele sounds of the Variax. They're not identical, but honestly I wouldn't call one better than the other. Perhaps if I'd been gigging my tele for 40 years I would have more of an opinion, but I'm quite picky about my guitar tone and the tele sound is great. The same goes for most of the other sounds; people lament the Strat, but I find it very useful, especially with an overdriven amp.
I'm not quite so convinced by the acoustic sounds, but then again I wouldn't buy a real Martin either. They do sound quite "clinical" and lack the depth of a real acoustic. But the real problem has more to do with playing style. If you've got a decent electric and a decent acoustic, you just don't play them in the same way. And the Variax is very much an electric guitar. I'd use the acoustic sounds for non-prominent parts of my home recordings (since it's so easy to record it hurts) and maybe a gig if I had to, but it's much more of a backup than the real deal.
I'm also not in love with the 12-string sounds, but since I've never played a real 12 string (or hardly heard one live, come to think of it) I'm not really qualified to comment. Again though, for a non-prominent strum, it's incredibly convenient.
The "novelty" sounds, the sitar and banjo are both very usable. I still think of these as a gimmick, but these are the sorts of sounds you may well want to layer into a complex mix or as a second guitar live, and they work well for that. And again, the Variax is an electric guitar, not a banjo. Big surprise.
I don't play slide, so I can't tell you anything about the resonator sounds.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
It's very playable. Like with any new guitar these days, it pays to get it set up properly (e.g. if you buy it from Regent Guitars in the uk [www.regentguitars.co.uk] they set it up profesionally before it leaves the store, and it does make a difference). In terms of playability it feels a lot more like my Pacifica than my Tele. Not a big surprise, and honestly, I'd rather have a light (my Tele is so heavy it hurts to stand up for a whole gig), no-frills, easily playable guitar. I've been playing the thing solidly for hours without problem. The neck feels fairly chunky, which I like, and is comfortable to play.
Playing it's not better than sex (my Taylor has something in that direction going... ahem....) but it's not worse than ... oh nevermind.
Some people commented on problems with mutes, rakes etc. I honestly don't know what they're on about; compared to playing my Tele, there's nothing in my playing style that I can't do with the Variax.
Reliability/Durability
:9
It feels very solid to me. I've not gigged it excessively yet. I can't really find any flaws; certainly I'd trust it live until it gave me rason to do otherwise.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never tried it.
Overall Rating
:10
Really, it's unique. I do consider it my second electric (compared to my Tele), but I may just never buy another electric again. It's not diminished my dreams of a Taylor 514 (or P series or 914 or 810 or...), but that was never to be expected either.
Don't nit-pick this tele versus that strat versus your vintage guitar. It really is like buying any other guitar - put it through the amp and effects you intend to put it through live or in the studio or at home; have a good play and decide if it's worth the money.
If you use a Pod or a Line 6 amp (especially the Vetta II - omg!) I very much doubt you'll be disappointed. The combination is almost perfect, as you would expect.
If you are a total purist who will look at 95% of the guitars in the store and go na-ah, then this guitar was never intended for you. Move along, move along.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/16/2003
at 07:29pm
by JB
Email: none
Features
:10
How can you NOT give this a 10?
Sound
:9
This is where you need to be patient and give the Variax a chance. I've found that while you're playing you might get too hung up on how it sounds (is it sounding like a strat, ric, acoustic, etc.) which can really get in the way of your playing. But... when you listen back to the recording the sound is amazing. It also depends on the gear you play it through (amps, effects) and because it has SO many possibilities one can get overly hung up on sounds instead of the groove. Bottom line: the Variax sounds good, great if you're willing to take the time to tweak it with your other gear (think of how much crap you went through to program your POD, VF-1, or rack multi effects). I do a lot of jamming and one of my friends has a Variax as well. When we listen back to our recordings it's a trip to hear realistic sounding acoustics, sitars, les pauls ... showing up in mid jam. The Martin sounds particularly full and yes the elecrtic models do need some extra drive before they kick in. I'm very happy with the Variax and don't really care if I ever get any "upgrades" via the internet.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:No Opinion
The Variax I have now is very playable. Not as smooth as my Parker Nitefly but still easy to play and attractive. The first one I got had a "twisted neck" but was replaced promptly.
Reliability/Durability
:No Opinion
It's a computer in a guitar so I'm very careful with it, but I tend to be very careful with all my investments.
Customer Support
:10
Well, as I stated above, my first Variax was far from problem free but between my dealer and Line 6 the guitar was promptly replaced. I've never need to deal with'em direct.
Overall Rating
:10
The Variax is a good guitar with great possibilitites. Too many of us are way too critical when we should be grateful of the opportunity to be able to make music. If you have the chance to try out a ton of gear, great. If not, you still get to make music. How cool is that?
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: US $1,000
Submitted 11/13/2003
at 07:03pm
by BOB
Email: MULLNICK<at>YAHOO dot COM
Features
:4
VERY DISAPPOINTED.. I BOUGHT THIS VARIAS WITH THE INTENTION OF DOWNLOADING NEW SOUNDS (LIKE NYLON STRING) IN THE NEAR FUTURE FROM LINE SIX WEB SIGHT THRU THE COMPUTER PORT... LINE SIX SAYS THIS MIGHT NOT HAPPEN.. WHAT A HYPE... THIS GUITAR PLAYS LIKE ANY OF MY MANY 200 DOLLAR ONES.. NOT GREAT ACTION.. NOT GREAT TONES... JUST A COMMON GUITAR WITH FUNNY SOUNDS... DOES NOT COME CLOSE TO A MARTIN SOUND.. OR A RICK..DEFINATELY NOT A STRAT SOUND..... WHEN THEY COME DOWN TO 300.. THEN YOU MIGHT HAVE A BARGAIN..
Sound
:4
I AM A FINGERSTYLE GUITARIST.. THIS IS NOT GOOD FOR THAT..
Action, Fit, & Finish
:4
SHOULD BE MUCH NICER FINISH AND BETER ACTION FOR A GRAND
Reliability/Durability
:5
GOOD LIVE.. WATCH THE BATTERIES.. YOU WILL NEED A BACKUP.. LOTS OF ELECTRONICS THAT COULD TAKE A SHIT
Customer Support
:2
FAST ANSWERS, BUT NOT WHAT I WANTED TO HEAR.. THEY ORIGINALLY ADVERTIXED TO SUPPLY NEW SOUNDS DOWNLOADS FROM THE NET.. NW THAY ARE BACKING OUT.. WHAT A SCAM..
Overall Rating
:2
39 YEARS.. I DID NOT GET WHAT I WS TOLD .. A SCAM
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: US $999
Submitted 10/19/2003
at 03:47am
by Hugh Allison
Email: htallison at yahoo<dot>com
Features
:10
I'll spare you the details (everyone else has mentioned these), Mine's black.
Sound
:8
Playing through a Line 6 Spyder 112. My only gripe is that going from electric to acoustic via the footswitch gives a pretty good pop in my in ear monitors.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
Action is a little high for electric, but dead on for acoustic. Remember what this thing is for. Variety.
Reliability/Durability
:8
No problem with mine. Have giged for the last 2 weekends without a problem.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:9
I've been playing semi-pro for 25 years. I love this ax. I need the variety it offers, especially the acoustic to electric with the flip of a switch. This guitar is all about VARIETY (Simliar to the way a keyboard emulates diffferent instruments). The sounds are good, and very close to originals. _In a mix_, no can tell tell that they are not the real thing. Look at the pros that are playing the variax, and all those who have issues with the sounds can argue with them, not me. The real plus here is yet to be realized.... the "future jack" that will allow updates to sounds, meaning you are not stuck forever with the sounds that come stock.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 10/17/2003
at 10:44am
by Anonymous
Features
:7
I'm reviewing the Line 6 Variax playing experience. Will not get into specs, don't know that much about it and you can find that info elsewhere. Other than to say it 's a modeling guitar that models a variety of Pauls, Telecaster, Stratocaster, jazzboxes, dobros, Coral electric sitar, banjo (?),acoustics, and other goodies. For what it is it's a pretty cool toy/gigging tool if you need a wide variety of sounds on a budget.
Sound
:5
I'm a working pro, i.e. my income is derived from playing guitar as well as teaching others how to play. I could see this being a useful gigging tool for cover/wedding gigs, I play everything from country to rock to jazz to blues and the guitar appears to cover the gamut. I played this thing split through a PA for acoustic sounds and a Line 6 Duoverb for electric. Plenty of variety obviously, that's this guitar's hook. Tele, Strat, Paul, acoustic, sitar, blah blah blah. Not noisy, but kind of a sterile sounding thing. None of the guitar sounds really sound like a guitar. I actually didn't detect that much of a difference between a lot of the sounds and I played it for a good hour and a half. The sitar sound was pretty cool, I hung with that for a while. Bottom line: if you need a decent backup guitar or want some off the path sounds buy this, but don't buy this expecting to replace the experience of playing any of the guitars modeled. People have preferences (Fender, Gibson, semi-hollow, hollow, solidbody) for a reason.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
This guitar felt fine to me. No objectionable qualities as far as construction. Saw a lot of reviews slamming this area, but the one I checked out was fine. Feels like a good $500 guitar. Was pretty comfortable to play, and pretty light. For what it is I'd give it a high mark.
Reliability/Durability
:No Opinion
I think the main hook to buying this guitar would be the lack of need to change guitars on a cover/wedding gig (just like the hook of buying a Line 6 amp would be their light weight, variety of serviceable sounds, and one stop shopping features.)Seemed solidly built.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
I've heard bad things about Line 6 customer support, but I don't really know.
Overall Rating
:5
Been playing 17 years. Have a Fender American Classic Strat and a Parker Nitefly, Boogie Mark IIa head and more recent cab, some stompboxes. What I dug about this guitar was the 12 string and sitar models. The wide variety of sounds would create a creative sitting around and fooling with ideas experience (kind of like my cheapo Boss ME50 processor.) I wouldn't buy this guitar, ever. The models just don't sound like guitars. Kind of like cheap Casio keyboards with different modeling sounds (my understanding is the levels of technology involved is similar), those models don't really sound like B-3 's do they? Feels like a guitar and works like one, but just isn't really. Buy it if you want some of those off the wall sounds like sitars and 12 strings in an electric format but do not expect to replace any of your beloved Strats, Teles, etc Line 6 does a great job of hyping their stuff but most of their of their products are underwhelming. Their stuff is very overpriced and just like computers, their stuff becomes obsolete overnight. Hopefully in a few years the technology will improve drastically (I think it will) but for now, beware.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: US $1000
Submitted 10/11/2003
at 06:24pm
by Bill Scherer
Features
:10
If you are on this site, you know what the features are at this point.
Sound
:8
The sounds are close enough that you know what the guitar is trying to emulate in most cases. The actual instruments would sound better but who has the kind of money to have all of these guitars?
What I like best is the tonal colors and flexibility that is available in one instrument notwithstanding what the guitar is mimicking.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:6
I imagine that Line 6 will introduce a higher quality guitar in the future. The model I have plays like a mid level strat. It is definitely playable but there is a noticable difference when I pick up some of my higher end guitars.
Reliability/Durability
:6
I have had my Variax for about 3 months. There is a problem with the foot A/B switch. The xlr connection is apparently cutting out. It did this during a gig and was pretty annoying. There have also been a couple of times that the guitar I dialed up did not respond. I had to move the pickup switch to get the correct sound to kick in.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
I am going tomorrow to get another foot switch.
Overall Rating
:10
I have been playing for about 20 years. I do some studio work but I primarily use the guitar for live purposes playing covers. I love the flexibility of the guitar and the ability to switch to an acoustic sound without changing guitars. My Takamine Garth Brooks model acoustic is significantly better but the Variax acoustic sound is not bad. For anyone who plays covers and enjoys trying to sound as accurate as possible, this guitar is exactly what you need.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: US $999
Submitted 09/28/2003
at 02:41pm
by Cliff
Email: none
Features
:10
Many specific guitars, including acoustic and 12 string models, plus some odd instruments like the banjo and sitar. The whole concept is amazing. Although I own some of these actual guitars, I would never have the need, or money for them all. This instrument gives me the opportunity to dabble with all the sounds for all the guitars.
Sound
:9
Amazingly, many of the sounds are very close. I realize I am not an expert, and I do not own most of the guitars to campare with, I can tell you the sounds are very close to what I am familiar with. I run my variax through a Line 6 PODxt and a Barringher piano amp, and I am very impressed with the sound I get. I also get a very good sound through my fender amp. All the models may not be perfect, but they are very good.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:9
Sort of a Fender feel to it, odd looking without pickups, but easy to hold and play. Action seems pretty good to me. I'm sure the more I use it, the more comfortable I will be with the feel.
Reliability/Durability
:9
No problems fo far, I've had mine for about four months. Although I do not gig, (i play only for my poor family, my pets and myself) the variax seems to hold up as well as any of my other guitars.
Customer Support
:9
Haven't had to use it, but that is a good thing.
Overall Rating
:10
I'm a bit surprised at the bad ratings some people have given this instrument. I suspect they really haven't played the variax much, or may be tone snobs that have a need to impress people with their 'music ear'. For the price you really get a lot. It plays very well, and sounds as well or better than my Gibsons, Ric, Fender and Ephiphone. I have been playing for many years, and this is my favorite guitar (I seldom pick up any of my others anymore). I would recommend the variax to anybody wanting to play many different guitars, but not wanting to spend the money for the actual guitars.
Product: Line 6 Variax Price Paid: US $850
Submitted 09/26/2003
at 10:13am
by Josiah
Features
:9
Variax is to guitar what POD is to amp. Volume, Tone and guitar model knobs, and a five-way selector. Bridge pickup. String-thru body. Tuners are no-name, but they stay tuned OK. Comes w/ gig bag, TRX cable and special foot-switch.
Sound
:10
The sounds are very cool. There are 21 different guitars, most of which have different pickup config options. When run thru a PODxt this guitar is really something. The models aren't perfect, but this guitar's sounds are unique. That's good.
I play rhythm, lead and acustic. This guitar is not an acustic, but the D-28 model could do in a pinch. For all else this guitar is great.
Oh yeah, and not having pickup noise is nice too.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
Action was good out of the box. A little high for fast leads maybe, but perfect for rhythm and finger picking. Can be easily lowerd with the little alen key that came with it. Everything is tight, no loose fitting parts. Mine is black, and the finish is average or above average. Nothing fancy. Very practical. Not going to get oos and aahs when you open the case, but everything is shiny and clean.
Reliability/Durability
:8
I've only had the guitar for about three weeks, but the hardware seems durable enough, and the finish is not going to wear off any time soon. It's been reliable for me so far, and I would probably play without a backup as long as I had a spare set of strings handy.