🎶 Amplify Your Passion with Every Strum!
The Monoprice 1x10 Guitar Combo Amplifier is a powerful 40-watt solid-state amplifier featuring a 10-inch 4-ohm speaker, a versatile 3-band equalizer, and a headphone output for silent practice. With a frequency response of 60 Hz to 12 kHz and a compact design, this amp is perfect for musicians seeking quality sound and portability.
Power Source | Electric |
Output Channel Quantity | 1 |
Amplifier Type | Solid State |
Connector Type | 6.35mm Jack |
Number of Bands | 3 |
Speaker Size | 10 Inches |
Compatible Devices | Guitar |
Output Wattage | 40 Watts |
Item Weight | 22.3 Pounds |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 11.4"D x 18.7"W x 17.1"H |
Color | Multi |
A**R
Great deal for the price
This amp sounds really good. Pleasantly surprised. Has a beefier sound than expected and overdrive works nicely. Can meet a wide variety of needs and the reverb setting is as good as my larger Peavey amp. Very satisfied
R**S
Great little AMP
Not a sound expert so this is a basic review not a technical one. I bought this to learn guitar and sound comes out and the knobs make sounds change. Does get feedback at times with the amp or amp cable but i believe thats a normal expectation. Overall cant complain. it seems to do what we bought it for. As far as quality, I can't say, I can't see it comparing to a high dollar amp, but for the beginner it will do the trick.
E**K
Versatile! But sound quality/speaker is lacking
I like the equalization options and the overdrive was a nice touch. You can crank it to 11. It is full of input/output ports galore, which is was why I got it. There's a ton you can do with it.The volume is good it can get very loud, but the sound easily becomes too muddled. It's like it has a low quality speaker that can't handle the power. What gives?Seriously, it's a starter amp type sound, which was disappointing. For example, the bass isn't powerful but more just "muffles" the sound than deliver any bass. For that, I' just go to my Vypyr and get loud but professional amp sounds.At best, if you play metal, to get good sound you'll have to tweak away at fx pedals to help balance it out. It will take some work to make it somewhat passable.However, the low input wss particularly awesome. The sounds are more subdued, cleaner, and handles better at high volume. The high input can get raspy, in contrast.Pretty cool.Separately, as an amp for other things, it's a good deal. I can easily plug in one of my keyboards while feeding in recordings or a mic, or other instrument, and feed it out into another amp if I wanted.Amp is good size and not too heavy, seems sturdy. Notably mesh over speakers seems wavy cheap. Someone mwntiomed their's caught smoke. I smelt something but it wasnt hot but more of new amp smell breaking it in. If that changes I'll update review.Overall, good deal for price, but too bad speaker quality wasn,'t better, but just maybe my opinion, my snazzy Peavey amp might have spoiled me.
J**M
A lot of good features for a reasonable price.
The Monoprice Stage Right 40 watt amp was everything I expected for a $99 amp and a bit more. It has a great sound for the price point. It seems to be well-made. The overdrive/distortion is reasonably good but since I have four pedals it's kinda academic. I was able to turn it up pretty high in clean-tone (without pedals) before breaking up some. Again, for the price, a great loud/good tone practice amp. The spring reverb works pretty well and can be well-controlled-it sounds a heck of a lot better than another amp I once had that created it electronically. A minor peeve: I can hear a teeny bit of reverb in whatever I'm playing with the reverb turned off. I'm running two of my pedals straight into the high input jack and the other two (an equalizer and pre-amp/tube modeler) into the Fx send and return jacks. That really cleaned up and sharpened the total sound. The other two pedals are compress/sustain and a morpher. I then ran a line out to a 15 watt Fender amp to split out some of the bass separately. The MP SR amp drives the smaller amp very well with no issues. I hear just a smidgen of hiss at low volumes with or without the Fender amp. The Fender had zero hiss on its own. Overall, I'm very satisfied. Monoprice: consider adding an XLR input and output. I think people would pay a bit more for that feature.Update 11-21-2021: I'm still loving it. I see the price has gone up (hasn't everything?) but it would still be great at that price. Lots of learning curve for two months has ironed out a bunch of sound issues that weren't this amp's fault (like maybe my playing.) The fx circuit and spring reverb (I stopped noticing the slight reverb with the control turned down, or maybe it healed itself) are worth the price! I'm considering a Celestion or other speaker upgrade down the road. Moving pedals around and doing different things with line in/out took care of a bit of the hiss. It's now liveable. You cannot go wrong!
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