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Vox Cambridge 15

Summary
Manufacturer URLwww.voxamps.co.uk
Features7.8 (65 responses)
Sound Quality8.6 (67 responses)
Reliability8.3 (46 responses)
Customer Support5.5 (13 responses)
Overall Rating8.8 (65 responses)
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Price Paid: Ģ120 GBP (Including Delivery)

Features: 8
Bought 2002,guess made 2001 Korea..features all listed below.


I wish it had reverb,find the tremelo a bit "daft".


Also wish it had metal corners - it doesn't go out of the house at the moment,but looks as if it would be prone to damage if it did.


1 tube in preamp (ecc83/12ax7? ,maybe),rest is solid state. I guess the guys below konw more about that stuff.

Sound Quality: 9
I use it with guitars ranging from a telecaster copy with low impedance pickups (350 ohms low enuff for ya?) to a Gibson.Also used with 2 strat clones and an SG clone.


Play everything from country/Elvis up to Black Sabbath,but usually vere off at Led Zep.[and stay in that area] and the usual rock .
cliche classics.


Ok, this ain't a 6000$Ģ boutique amp,it is a very good little practice amp and suits the variety of sound which i make.
They key is/are the treble/bass controls and the mid boost button. they allow you to tailor your sound.


Looking from the back of the amp (which is facing the controls,the correct way) put the T and B around 12 to 1 o'clock for a more 'M@rsh@ll' type sound . Futzing with the other controls,brings virually every tone which i have listed,although the Sabbath tones might be lacking in your ears...this is not it's designed sonic role.


It WILL do country to ZZ top sounds quite nicely and this is it's day to day use.


WARNING : Never,ever,put a trebley guitar through this with the treble control up or you will be saying "Ouch", "Whatsay" and the other things people say when their ear[drum]s have been ruptured by extreme high frequencies.


Use the "EQ" -what there is- in good health for a fine variety of tones,and I like the fact that you can use the volume as a master and get a good "cranked" tone at a low volume with volume at just off the 'stop' [half past 7] and all the other controls set where you want them.


Distortion is reasonable,but, this is a Dylan/Beatles/Zep/Stones amp not a Megatallica eardrum whupper.
>>>
Negatively, while the speaker is fair quality,the combination of build and speaker design mean that if you go over the "1 o'clock" position with volume control the T and B up and the gain at 12 o' clock ,moderate cabinet shake and speaker fartage result.


The gold trim cord comes out easily and looks a bit naff and that badge is so friggin' cheap they may as well have stuck a sticker on.<<< These are the only negative points I have found in over 8 months ownership.


The speaker cab and line out are a nice option and it does sound great out to a cab ,even through my cheap home built 2 by 10 thing.


I Like the sound of this thing very much,although I almost wish,i'd saved a few Ģ$ more and bought a Laney LC15 which is all valve,less farty and will whup most ss amps up to 40/50 watts (RMS,whut??).


The Cambridge gets a high 8 - the Laney gets a high 9.

Reliability: 7
No problems since Feb'02 with almost daily use,and some laziness whereby I ocasionally don't switch off when changing guitars _ THIS IS A VERY,VERY NAUGHTY THING TO DO TO SUCH A CUTE LITTLE AMP,but, it survives,so far.


Doesn't seem the best build quality for the long term,I may be wrong.

Customer Support: 1
Ever try to get something out of Vox that they don't want you to have?


Hello Vox - major PR hole, you dimwits.


Service centre? I can't even find a bloody amp to try, from any dealer! I'll have to fix it myself and any half decent amp tech should also be able to fix this up with one eye closed.


1 yr warranty from shop.

Overall Rating: 8
Please note : I only play electric guitar at home,these days.
I *suspect* that if you put this through a bigger amplifier [line out] and hooked it up to a Marshall type cab you *may* have a giggable setup.YMMV.


I Like this thing very much,although I almost wish,i'd saved a few Ģ$ more and bought a Laney LC15 which is all valve and less farty.


The Cambridge gets a high 8 - the Laney gets a high 9.


Most of the HC reviews and the Guitarist magazine online review about this amp give you a fair picture of what it is like.


Unfortunately these are not made any more and I think they just edge the Pathfinder 15 on sound quality,another unfortunate thing is that to swap the valve and speaker means your total spend has exceeded the price of the basic Laney - otherwise a better quality speaker and valve may "up your Vox's sonicality" (sic)[as some people have suggested below] ,you know what i mean.


On the whole I chose it because of a "friend"'s recommendation,plus reading through all of these reviews,Guitarist magazine and the price was right.They had none in any guitar shop in the whole of the south-west of England (apparently),so i had to trust to recommendations and a return policy (always VERY wary of doing that). So thanks,earlier HC reviewers, your comments helped a lot.


Two words - Want reverb.


Two more - Stuff tremelo.


End.

Submitted by James at 10/21/2002 06:43

Price Paid: 165 (euros) used

Features: 7
I just bought it second hand. It's a model made in Korea 1999. Looks new.
on the top panel you can find the following:
1 input(pretty solid...seems in perfect condition)
gain
gain boost switch
volume
mid range boost switch
treble
bass
tremolo speed
tremolo depth
imput for pedal switch
power switch


The tremolo is the big mistery for me....it doesnt sound very effective (the effect has little or almost no influence on the sound, no matter if the depth is at 2 or 10)...anyway,...I dont really miss this effect in the type of music I play so, as far as i'm concerned, i dont really care.


I really miss a second channal,and I'd rather have reverb than tremolo...


Speaker: Celestion Bulldog 8" , made in England (awsome sound!!!)


there's one 12aX7 tube in the preamp. (it does its job, but i think in my case its probably quite worn out...i might need to substitute it)


on the back there are:
headphones output
Line Output
8 ohm 15 W Ext speaker

Sound Quality: 8
I would give definitely a 10 for the clean sound (so what lowers the mark is the distorted sound, which doesnt score more than a 6.5).
At a low gain you can get a very distinct dry and clean sound(when you play a chord you can hear each string ringing).


Very warm and sweet when you switch the mid.range boost on.
The volume/loudness/ responsivness is really excellent for this size.
The sound gets a bit fat and greasy the more gain you add,...and actually I really dont like too much the sound with Half gain (But it's good if you play blues or 70's kinda old rock/ hard rock,....I play none of these styles, so it doesnt satisfy me at all when I play more heavy stuff)
To get a decent distorted sound I really have to put the gain on 8 or higher than that, and keep the volume not higher than 4 or 5 (and if you turn the gain boost on, with these setting, it can really ROCK !!!).
The sound does get pretty fozzy and muddy when i turn the gain higher than 6.
I use this amp with a Yamaha SG (2 Humbukers), boss super chorus, wha-wha dunlop, cry baby). I tried it also with a Fender Strat....very nice sounds with both.


I play many different styles,....from funk/rock to hard rock,R&B, to almost heavy metal. In gigs I use a Crate combo twin 80 Watts, which has a totally different sound than the Vox. I love the distortion on the Crate muuuuuuuuuch better than the one in the Vox, but as for the clean sound, the little Vox beats the big Crate 3-0.

I would not recommend this amp for Heavy Metal sounds.
I would definitely recommend it for rock-blues, funk, hard rock (a la deep purple, ac/dc) and even classic jazz (George Benson, Wes Montgomery...)

Reliability: 8
I just bought it as a second hand, and it looks new. It works perfectly. Not noisy at all. The tube might be a bit worn out,...tho...but hey...it's probably about 2 or 3 years old.
I had the chance to play with another Vox Cambridge 15, many times before I bought this one, cos a friend of mine had exactly the same amp model. At that time I didnt know it was only 15 watts...I thought it was at least 20.
One time, I had a problem with my Crate: the fuse blew up on a sunday morning and I had to play with my band on that afternoon...all shops were closed...Panick!!...Luckily I could borrow the little Vox from this friend of mine.
I was really worryed it would never cope with a full band, and I was very sckeptic ,...but in a desperate situation like that you just give it a try. And,...surprise!! once miked it, this thingy absolutely stood its ground with great dignity, even when surrounded by really noisy and loud full band settings . I could use it as a monitor and it was no problem.


Customer Support: 10

Overall Rating: 9
I bought it recently,...I wouldnt use it as a "gig" amp in big or open spaces. But in smaller places i'm sure it would do his job if you hook it to a good PA.
Very good ratio quality/price.
Very useful for small jams or recordings.


I wish it had a 10" speaker and a better distorted sound. (possibly 2 channals), ...Than I could really fall in love ....

Submitted by bestintown at 10/17/2002 21:15

Price Paid: US $180?

Features: 8
I think you know by now

Sound Quality: 8
I use a late model SG. I don't play super heavy stuff. Really into Rush, U2 & sounds like that. No real noise problems. It's not super versatile, it has a spike in the response around 200-250Hz that drives me nutz but it's hands down the best sounding amp of it size. It's also pretty edgy & harsh at high volume but again, for it's size....

Reliability: 10
Never any problems. I've used it for a few small jobs but can't compete w/ a full band. I've even run bass through it in a pinch wich sounds horrible but it held up OK.
It really makes me wonder, however b/c I just bought the 30watt twin version (hasn't arrived yet) and have heard some horror storis and as far as I know, they're almost the same amp & made in the same factory.

Customer Support: N/A

Overall Rating: 9
I'm a drummer who's played for some time but started fiddling w/ guitar maybe 3 years ago.
I really like this amp but would not buy it again as I would get something a bit higher end/louder/more expensive. I compared it w/ maybe 3 other practiced amps at the shop & have played through 4 others besides those & this was hands down the best.

Submitted by Silent Bob at 09/24/2002 21:38

Price Paid: 222.90 (€ EUROS)

Features: 8
Well, you know by now, don't you? Input/gain/gainboost/volume/mid range boost/treble/bass/tremolo speed/tremolo depth/foot switch/power on top. Headphones/ext. speaker/line out at the back.

Sound Quality: 9
I saw it in a shop and tried it with a Telecaster 'cause I wanted a compact, slightly overdriven, non-heavy metal, twangy sound using my '78 Fender Telecaster at home. Within 5 minutes I knew this thing could do the job. Had to buy it. It may not compare with an AC30 or other all tube amps, but it's great fun. Sounds also good with my Les Paul Junior. Haven't tried the Rickenbacker yet. Have to put some strings on that.

Reliability: N/A
Haven't done a gig with it. I only bought it last week. I don't think it'll be loud enough if there's no P.A.. Maybe I should get a second one.

Customer Support: N/A

Overall Rating: 9
For years I used a Fender Vibrolux Reverb and a Marshall (no tube) 30 watts combo plus any effect I could find. It's back to basics now. If the Cambridge were stolen I'd get another one. I like the sound and the looks. For playing at home I also have a little Park/Marshall thing that I bought cheap, but the Vox rules over that one. I like the tremolo and ordered a foot switch from the shop. I never use reverb so I don't miss that. The headphones output sounds crap, but they always do on guitar amps and I wouldn't use it anyway. No problem there.

Submitted by Burt Fenderwoods at 08/23/2002 16:22

Price Paid: N/A used

Features: 9
Small practice amp: 15 watt, semi-two channel (one gain and mastervolume)with shared EQ (bass and treble)and tremolo (dept and speed), one eight inch VOX/Celestion Blue speaker. Has a 12AX7WA tube in the pre-amp. Connections for footswitch, External speaker, headphones and line out. The amp has a switchable gain boost and mid range boost (via footswitch). The amp has a typical VOX vintage style look. I needed a small good sounding and good looking (living room)practice amp with a broad range of sounds. Compared to similar sized/priced amps from other manufactures, this amp beats them all in looks, sound and features. The build in tremolo is just awesome for this price range. The only thing that could be neat was a speaker simulated line- and headphone output.

Sound Quality: 9
I play mostly classic 70īrock (Thin Lizzy, AC/DC, Aerosmith, Led Zep). I use a modified Ibanez Talman with Gibson P-90īs and a Epiphone Les Paul Classic with Jeff Beck and ī59 humbuckers. For practicing i usually use no effects, but occationally i use a home made tube treble/mid booster to go with this amp.
This amp (althoug its a VOX and, not normally associated with hard rock) are capable to cover the tones from a clear, quite trebly vintage sound (with the Ibanez) to a quite monsterous overdrive with the Les Paul and booster. Angus, Scott, Joe and Jimmy can be dialed-in here (well allmost). The amp responds VERY well to the booster: it does not mud-out the sound, it just gets more drive and bite. Quite chunky. The tone controls are fairly effective and combined with the mid range boost you can go from a quite bassy/middle throaty sound to a trebly blistering tone. The amp lacks a bit of upper midrange, but with a suitable booster or EQ you can get good marshall crunch. The mid range boost is placed in an intermidiate stage of the overdrive circuit so it greatly affects the drive character of the amp. The 12AX7WA tube is the primary overdrive generator here. The little eight inch speaker does a very well job. Itīs quite loud and starts to break up VERY fast. I have done a little modification to the output stage, and that is to reconfigure the feedbackloop to a "constant-current-like" (like marshall valvestate) with a higher output resistance, resulting in a lower damping of the speaker. Try to hook up this thing to a 4x12 or a full stack and get a spoongy kick!. If you know a little about amp repair, try to replace the capacitors in the signal path with some higher quality ones. I have replaced them all with Wima Block capacitors, and for the tube circuit i used some good polyester filmīs and 1 watt metal film resistors for the anode resistor. The amp seems to come more alive with more original guitar signal character. This amp cannot compare to a real-deal tube amp setup (in comparison i would rate it 5-6) but in this price range, the tone is awesome. This is actually a practice amp you want to play!. The tremolo is done with a optocoupler. cool.

Reliability: 8
This amp seems to be build quite well, and critical components on the PCB are glued to the board. HF ferrite cores (like the ones used on PC monitors) are used strategical places to prevent interfeering from radios/mobile phones. The hardware of the amp seems quite sturdy, the VOX and Celestion logo on the front are quite "dinky" though. The tube is mounted directly to the PCB and are stronly hold in place by a retainer to the chassis. All in all it looks ok sturdy. It is not build like a tank, but used as a practice amp (this is what i have used it fore), i donīt think you will get into trouble. I would consider a flight case if i (ever) should use it live and regularely on stage. I have owned the amp for 8 months now, and used it almost every day. Never had a reliability problem.

Customer Support: 1
I traded the amp for an Celestion Vintage 30 speaker (GREAT speaker, but lying around for no use, i think i did a good deal with the VOX)from a guy who had modified the mastervoule circuit, so he could plug in a external volumepedal. But the lack of craftmanship led me to remove the "option". I asked through my local VOX/KORG/Marshall dealer if i could get a copy of the schematic, but that was just out of question. I tried to ask via E-mail at the official VOX web site, but i have never got a reply. THAT REALLY SUCKS!!. A big 1 (if there was an 0 i would have given it). I traced the pre/power- amp circuit my self and removed the mod. Now it work perfect.

Overall Rating: 9
I have been playing now for some 15 yers, and my main setup is a ī74 Marshall 1987 50watt head through a ī70 8x10 Marshall cabinet and an reissue Marshall Bluesbreaker Combo. For effects i use a Dunlop Cry Baby, home made tube mid/treble booster, a Guyatone flanger, a Ibanez Phaser Tone and a ROSS analog echo. Yep, delay in front of an overdriven amp is a challenge, but pays off. Sometimes i use my Marshall JMP-1 with a Yamaha E1005 analog delay for flexibility and convenience (and lower sound preassure). The VOX cannot compete with this set up at all, but for doing the practice-amp-work, itīs an ace.
It is not an all tube amp, and does not sound like it, but it has a very pleasant feel and tone. I would definately get another one if it was stolen or broke.
I have tried Marshalls/Parks, fenders

Submitted by RAS at 08/20/2002 07:31

Price Paid: Ģ150 with 2 button footswitch (British Pounds)

Features: 7
Made in 2000. It is not actually very versitile at all. The footswitch is for a gainboost or tremelo. It is not a metal head's amp It is only a 15 watt practice amp. It has one TUBE in it.

Sound Quality: 9
Les paul custom, junior, 52 telecaster, Ibanez with dimarzios... Lots of vintage effects. It is a practice amp. For the price, you can't actually get any better. The distortion side is not huge but fat and blusy. Similar in a way to the AC30 I have. The clean channel is VERY good. The distortion side is OK but can be made incredable if you add an overdrive to it. Tremelo is a bit shallow. Clean channel is really very smooth!

Reliability: 9
I'd never gig a 15 watt amp! I gig with JCM 800, Ac 30... Never broken down. The fabrique can come off though. It is the 2nd best practice bedsite amp I have, after the Fender Champ.

Customer Support: N/A

Overall Rating: 9
Best non-tube practice amp ever. Nice and simple!! Very good sounds from a small amp!! I wish it has a switchable channel

Submitted by Alvin at 07/01/2002 07:01

Price Paid: US $140 used

Features: 7
This is a 2001 model. The amp sounds GREAT by itself, but with other pedals, I can't get nearly as good a sound as I get out of my Fender Twin. You have to turn the gain up pretty high to get any real response from overdrive or distortion pedals, which kind of defeats the purpose of using these pedals in the first place. Has 2 channels, as you know, one normal and one with gain boost. You can buy a footswitch to go between the two. To get a good distortion sound out of this thing, you have to have the gain up pretty high, so switching channels is pretty useless-- it's already pretty heavily overdriven by the time you turn the gain up enough on the clean channel; not good for going from really clean to heavily overdriven. A


Actually, I was surprised by how loud this thing gets. It isn't enough to get you over a drummer (the 30W with the bigger speaker would be perfect for this), but it can get LOUD. Fills a room easy.

Sound Quality: 9
This is where the amp shines. Has a surprisingly clean, crisp sound and can go to pretty high volumes without distorting. This thing gets real noisy on the gain boost channel with a single-coil fender, but sounds pretty quiet with a Gibson guitar with stock humbuckers. Sounds surprisingly comparable to my Fender Twin, just with lower volume and a distortion channel.


I was also REALLY pleased with the overdrive sound. With a tele or a strat, you can get some really great sounds, perfect for blues and rock. So the overdrive isn't too intense, but is still authentic, tube sound. Real cool.

Reliability: 9
Pretty well-built. I have tossed this thing around a bit and it still looks like-new. Never broken down or anything like that. I'd use it without a backup in a smaller-size gig setting.

Customer Support: N/A
Don't know.

Overall Rating: 9
One more thing I want to say-- a re-tube does WONDERS for this amp. I took out the stock Sovtek and put in a higher-level Electro-Harmonix Sovtek, and even with the slight upgrade in tubes, the sound increased GREATLY. The overdrive sounds even better. Now I can get really cool Hendrix-style Marshall amp overdrive sounds out of the amp (pretty cool considering it's small size).


This thing is dependable, sounds great, gets a lot of volume considering it's an 8" speaker and only 15 Watts. This is pretty much the perfect practice amp. Thanks, Vox.

Submitted by Anonymous at 05/27/2002 17:48

Price Paid: 1200 (FIM)

Features: 8
Headphone jack, line output and external speaker connections make this a very useful small amp. It has the traditional Vox-style interactive bass and treble tone controls plus tremolo. Gain boost and midrange boost (MRB) are also included. No reverb!!! Has a tube preamp.

Sound Quality: 9
I was looking for a practice amp to go with my Les Paul Deluxe two years ago, and found out about the new small Vox amps while searching. I tried the Vox Pathfinder also, but liked the Cambridge more because the distortion/overdrive was a lot better, so I bought it.


At first I was actually disappointed with the sound. It sounded sort of too trebly and too dark at the same time. After a few months I adjusted the guitar's pickups and the sound was much better. The Cambridge is very much a classic rock/pop type of amp. I'm into blues and blues-rock mostly and it works quite well for these too. This amp is bright and jangly in general, but with the gain boost it can sound a bit darker. Overdrive starts with a nice trebly breakup that becomes rasping and harsh with more gain. There's a sweetspot between one third and slightly past halfway in gain that I like; at this setting I can go from clean to overdrive just by picking harder. High gain settings sound unconvincing, but at the sweetspot the sounds are great. This amp doesn't have a completely clean sound at any usable (higher)volume, except for lead playing perhaps.


I tried the tube swapping thing, but wasn't that impressed. I got a rare nos Tesla e83cc, which was good for getting more clean headroom and definition, but the stock tube was better for versatility. So a lot depends on which particular tube you use. The stock tube isn't bad at all IMHO.


My impression is that a trebly input produces the best tone with this amp, so Strats and Teles should work best, as many of these reviews attest. The minihumbuckers on my Les Paul seem to work OK as well.


Reliability: 7
Not foolproof. It went mute one day, about a month after purchasing. The dealer had it fixed no questions asked (1 year warranty). No problems since.

Customer Support: N/A

Overall Rating: 9
I have 6+ years playing experience, 5 years on accoustic's, now I only play electric. The strength of this amp lies in the mildly overdriven bright Voxy sound. Sometimes I think an amp couldn't sound better, and at other times I get frustrated because I can't get the sound that it almost promises to deliver: long sustain and rich overdrive = more tubes = more bucks. A great practice amp nonetheless, if you happen to like the Vox sound. If not, there are other reasonable options especially for clean sounds and brutal distortion etc.

Submitted by Anonymous at 05/19/2002 02:41

Price Paid: US $140.00

Features: 6
Brand new assume it was made around 2001 or 2002
Same features as the other 50 or so Vox's reviewed..
In my opinion this amp has several useless features, the most useless of which is the tremlo. Some nice feature as well but I would trade most all of them for a second channel

Sound Quality: N/A
Used with a Tele equiped with Vintage Noisless Bridge, and a Texas Special neck pup. My kid also uses an Ibanez with Powersound pups (Crap) and an old Hohner "Z" with a nice set of split coil Humbuckers through this amp. This amp is awesome! for the money nothing that I know of even comes close! I just bought my son his own amp, a Marshall Valvestate 65 Watt, He and I tried everything under the sun under $300 (the Marshall was used) and nothing came close to the Vox in terms of clean tones, the Marshall edges the Vox in overall brutal distortion, but clean... no way and when I say Brutal Distortion I mean the kind that a 14 year old into Korn, and Blink 182 would like. The Vox sounds sweet with the gain dimed, If you ever wondered what "creamy" or "smooth" distortion was, listen to the Vox. At max volume the clean sound degenerates a bit, but overall this amp nails it for me. I gotta give it a 10 for the money, yeah there maybe better out there for double or triple the price... but for $140.00 nothing comes close.

Reliability: N/A
No problems yet

Customer Support: N/A
No experience with Customer Support

Overall Rating: 10
I am considering trading this amp in towards the purchase of the 30 watt version, I want the extra channel and volume, but I cant think of another brand I would consider in this price range, Again, clean it absolutly blows away the competition even at twice the price, get it dirty and it's a matter of opinion. I prefer it, 14 year olds might not, but thats why these "Nu-Metal" bands all use Marshalls and Mesa Boogies, this isnt a Gainiacs amp. Several people have stated that people are just wowed by this amps looks when they rave about it.. It is a sweet looking vintage style amp, but I would use it even if it looked like a P.O.S Crate amp, it just sounds good, the asthetics are just the icing.

Submitted by Anonymous at 05/14/2002 20:09

Price Paid: US $120

Features: 9
Volume, gain, bass, treble, tremolo speed and depth. 15 watts with 12ax7 preamp tube. Headphone and speaker outs, 8" celestion speaker. I don't ever use reverb, so I didn't miss it. I use it mostly for recording, and solo coffeehouse stuff.

Sound Quality: 10
I'm writing this review not only because this is a cool amp, but because of my experience at a session last night. I was in a room with a couple Marshalls, a Boogie rectifier, a Boogie MK.1, Fender Deluxe, Peavey Classic 50 and a few others. I must say that the built-in speaker on this amp doesn't do so hot for me at anything other than lowest volumes, because it seems to rattle the entire cabinet; maybe that's just me. But when you plug this amp into, say, a 4x12, it's one of the best and most versatile guitar amps I've ever heard. Every single time we needed a guitar sound I tried the other 20 grand worth of gear and went back to this little 100 dollar 15 watt combo through a 4x12. I used Les pauls, SG's, a Rickenbacker, an American tele and a Danalectro through it, and it sounded right every time. It took us 2 hours to get a sound with a Dual Rectifier, and about a minute and a half to get a sound with this amp. Turn on, put mic on speaker, sounds good, every time. The tremolo was also wonderful, as Vox tremolos always are. I can't exactly say that this amp sounds like an AC-30 per se, just that it nearly ALWAYS SOUNDS GOOD.
The gain boost wasn't too effective, and is kind of muddy at times; but turn up the normal gain, especially with humbuckers, and I would (and just did) put this amp up against any vintage, new, boutique or other amp out there in the studio. And last night, this one nearly always won.

Reliability: 10
There's really nothing to break on it. It just works. I will say that sometimes the internal speaker bottoms out, and it sounds like the paper is actually hitting the metal speaker basket, so I worry about blowing it if it's too loud; may replace sometime, but I don't use it all that much, I generally plug into a different cabinet.

Customer Support: N/A
Never dealt with them. I believe it has a warranty.

Overall Rating: 10
Awesome. If you do any session work at all, buy it. Also makes a killer practice amp because I got the sound of a pushed, loud-ass Marshall, and that feel, but at much lower volume. IT'S LIKE A HUNDRED DOLLARS, WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO LOSE. BUY IT. heh.

Submitted by Mike Ingram at 04/28/2002 11:02

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Summary
Manufacturer URLwww.voxamps.co.uk
Features7.8 (65 responses)
Sound Quality8.6 (67 responses)
Reliability8.3 (46 responses)
Customer Support5.5 (13 responses)
Overall Rating8.8 (65 responses)
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