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I was surprised how poor this amp was.
I got the amp as a simple practice amp with a few features and a few Marshall tones. I also have a Marshall Origin 20 sitting next to it and a Yamaha THR10 on my desk. Comparing the three, I didn't expect the MG30 to be equally as good as the others, but I was surprised at how poorly it stacked up across the board.
Turning the amp on, it's noisy. At the same volume/gain levels the other two amps are not. The Yamaha lead channel is based on a Marshall plexi, so I turned on the MG crunch channel to find a comparable tone; one week later, I'm still looking.
Sounds: the MG sounds poor when compared to the Yamaha THR10 Marshall sim - not just a bit down, it is poor in comparison - this shocked me. The Yamaha is $300 against the $200 of the MG, but I expected the MG to at least do the Marshall tone as well as the Yamaha - it cannot even get close; extremely disappointing.
Effects: it's hard to dial in effects on the MG due to the way 5 effects use the same knob, so the actual linear adjustment space is tiny - this is a problem because finding a good sound takes a lot of tweaking. Again, the effects sound poor compared to the Yamaha THR. The reverb has two styles and is pretty light, but it's ok - it adds a bit of depth and space to the sound. I have many pedals I use with my Marshall Origin (such as a Wampler delay, TS808, Keeley reverb, etc), and I didn't expect the MG effects to be that good (and they are nowhere near), but I expected them to compare ok to the built in effects of the Yamaha THR10 - they don't.
Build quality is fine.
Late at night, I want to play the MG because it has a headphone socket and an audio in, but just turning the amp on is so noisy (a lot noisier than the 20w tube amp sitting next to it - not turned on at the same time - that I'm put off and just plug into the Yamaha instead even though it's more uncomfortable to play at my desk.
4 channels is good, but it takes a long time to find decent sounds, so the fact there are 4 memory presets is useful - you need them; once you find a sound you like on a particular channel (this may take 20+ minutes) then press save and don't change the settings of the amp again on this channel (although, if you do the tone stays at the set position when going off and back onto a channel) - this is kinda ridiculous, right, that the amp is made as an easy to use non-complex modelling amp, no PC connection required, just plug in and turn a few knobs to get a good sound, but you can't...
I had a Randall solid state practice amp, a KH edition, and it sounded a lot better than this amp.
This is quite cheap, so might be good for a first amp, but even at $200 there are better amps such as a Bugera T5 head with a HB cab - I owned that last year, and it sounded much much better in every way than this MG. I also has a Fender Mustang 20w solid state amp about 5 years ago and it did the Fender sound much better than this amp does the Marshall sound. At half the price, a VOX pathfinder is similar sound quality to this amp.
I was shocked at how poor this amp sounds and how difficult it is to find good sounds - it just reduces your playing time. I will give this away, I couldn't in good faith sell this amp on - and, I'm fond of Marshall amps; I know the MG50/100 heads sound good, I had a DSL 5w which was great once I changed the speaker. Try this amp out in person before buying to see if you like it's qualities compared to other similar amps; if you buy blind on the internet then don't throw away the box, and be sure of the returns process...
Turning the amp on, it's noisy. At the same volume/gain levels the other two amps are not. The Yamaha lead channel is based on a Marshall plexi, so I turned on the MG crunch channel to find a comparable tone; one week later, I'm still looking.
Sounds: the MG sounds poor when compared to the Yamaha THR10 Marshall sim - not just a bit down, it is poor in comparison - this shocked me. The Yamaha is $300 against the $200 of the MG, but I expected the MG to at least do the Marshall tone as well as the Yamaha - it cannot even get close; extremely disappointing.
Effects: it's hard to dial in effects on the MG due to the way 5 effects use the same knob, so the actual linear adjustment space is tiny - this is a problem because finding a good sound takes a lot of tweaking. Again, the effects sound poor compared to the Yamaha THR. The reverb has two styles and is pretty light, but it's ok - it adds a bit of depth and space to the sound. I have many pedals I use with my Marshall Origin (such as a Wampler delay, TS808, Keeley reverb, etc), and I didn't expect the MG effects to be that good (and they are nowhere near), but I expected them to compare ok to the built in effects of the Yamaha THR10 - they don't.
Build quality is fine.
Late at night, I want to play the MG because it has a headphone socket and an audio in, but just turning the amp on is so noisy (a lot noisier than the 20w tube amp sitting next to it - not turned on at the same time - that I'm put off and just plug into the Yamaha instead even though it's more uncomfortable to play at my desk.
4 channels is good, but it takes a long time to find decent sounds, so the fact there are 4 memory presets is useful - you need them; once you find a sound you like on a particular channel (this may take 20+ minutes) then press save and don't change the settings of the amp again on this channel (although, if you do the tone stays at the set position when going off and back onto a channel) - this is kinda ridiculous, right, that the amp is made as an easy to use non-complex modelling amp, no PC connection required, just plug in and turn a few knobs to get a good sound, but you can't...
I had a Randall solid state practice amp, a KH edition, and it sounded a lot better than this amp.
This is quite cheap, so might be good for a first amp, but even at $200 there are better amps such as a Bugera T5 head with a HB cab - I owned that last year, and it sounded much much better in every way than this MG. I also has a Fender Mustang 20w solid state amp about 5 years ago and it did the Fender sound much better than this amp does the Marshall sound. At half the price, a VOX pathfinder is similar sound quality to this amp.
I was shocked at how poor this amp sounds and how difficult it is to find good sounds - it just reduces your playing time. I will give this away, I couldn't in good faith sell this amp on - and, I'm fond of Marshall amps; I know the MG50/100 heads sound good, I had a DSL 5w which was great once I changed the speaker. Try this amp out in person before buying to see if you like it's qualities compared to other similar amps; if you buy blind on the internet then don't throw away the box, and be sure of the returns process...
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A great amp for metal.
The Marshall MG30GFX combo amplifier features a 10” speaker that utilises every single watt of the 30 watts available to you – you’ll hear every note you play in glorious detail. The 30-watt output makes it a great option for gigging smaller venues, rehearsal spaces and for home/apartment use. A headphone output allows you to jam in silence without having to worry about disturbing your neighbours or housemates too! This also makes a great amp for recording as you have a world of digital FX built-in to make use of including Reverb, Chorus, Phaser, Flanger, Delay and Octave effects – all of which can be manipulated via the front controls on the amp.The addition of 2 x channels – Clean and Drive as well as 2 x Overdrive options means you can enjoy everything from clean tones all the way to bone crunching distortion. This is a budget friendly amp for beginners with a world of sounds that professional players heavy metal players and blues lovers will enjoy.
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E
Gives You More Than What You Want
I bought this amp for home use. This solid state 30 watts amp is further than enough for home use, sound quality makes you happy. Because if you have a tube amp you need to use it increasing the volume as much as you can in order to taste the beautiful tube sound, i mean, if you are going to use with low volume, a tube amp can't be satisfying.
The sound of this Gold series of Marshall are pretty awesome according to previous ones.
And the effects on the amp (reverb, chorus, phaser, flanger, delay, octave) are quite satisfying if you don't have effect pedals. But you need a footswitch (which is sold separately) to use them easily (I wish it comes as default but i regret not buying the foodswitch honestly)
As a summary, i liked it so much..
The sound of this Gold series of Marshall are pretty awesome according to previous ones.
And the effects on the amp (reverb, chorus, phaser, flanger, delay, octave) are quite satisfying if you don't have effect pedals. But you need a footswitch (which is sold separately) to use them easily (I wish it comes as default but i regret not buying the foodswitch honestly)
As a summary, i liked it so much..
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H
Great practice amp!
Had a 15W from another brand and decided to increase a bit the power to 30W or 50W and overall tone, towards Marshall
If I were to buy another amp though I would probably go for the double 12' MGX 102 if to play smaller gigs or very large practice room. I was strongly tempted to get it instead but it exceeds my needs a the moment. We will meet again 102!
For now and my practice needs, the MG 30 was the best choice balancing power and needs. 50W was also a big temptation just for one tiny detail it can be crucial upon doubt, the power cable...
*PROs
Sound, looks, general construction, closed case, back to black and gold patterns. Overall quality and foremost, the value for your money since pretty decent amp for less than 180 EU
Enough power to even do small gigs, it almost there but with limitations
*CONs
-Channels are very nice but minor adjustments are in order to try to reach your favourite tones.
-The power cable is not a plug in cable as in the 50W, nothing to do with sound or specs but always better to be able to plug in a power cable upon need than to have to open the case. If gigs are your thing get the 50W onwards in all cases.
UPDATE after usage.....Sold it to get a Marshall valve state some month ago and I regret selling this amazing Amp, extremely happy with the new one but still I miss my MG dearly. If you have it, keep it no matter what else you have! My choice to sell was due to limited space since otherwise I would have just kept it.
If I were to buy another amp though I would probably go for the double 12' MGX 102 if to play smaller gigs or very large practice room. I was strongly tempted to get it instead but it exceeds my needs a the moment. We will meet again 102!
For now and my practice needs, the MG 30 was the best choice balancing power and needs. 50W was also a big temptation just for one tiny detail it can be crucial upon doubt, the power cable...
*PROs
Sound, looks, general construction, closed case, back to black and gold patterns. Overall quality and foremost, the value for your money since pretty decent amp for less than 180 EU
Enough power to even do small gigs, it almost there but with limitations
*CONs
-Channels are very nice but minor adjustments are in order to try to reach your favourite tones.
-The power cable is not a plug in cable as in the 50W, nothing to do with sound or specs but always better to be able to plug in a power cable upon need than to have to open the case. If gigs are your thing get the 50W onwards in all cases.
UPDATE after usage.....Sold it to get a Marshall valve state some month ago and I regret selling this amazing Amp, extremely happy with the new one but still I miss my MG dearly. If you have it, keep it no matter what else you have! My choice to sell was due to limited space since otherwise I would have just kept it.
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A
Marshall amps are what I would consider the best amp in any price bracket, along with fender amps. This amp was bound to be the best amp you could get for the price. I would recommend this amp even if it was €500, so to hear that it is at a measly €200, it is a no-brainer for any guitar player
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E
Amp effects were glitchy from first use
If I turn the amp on, even if the fx knob is off, the chorus sound is on. If I switch channel to distortion, again with the fx knob all the way down, the delay is on. The way I rectify this is by turning the fx knob up and back and that resets it I guess. Needless to say this is extremely annoying and ruins the playing experience.
So obviously the amp gets one star, if I could give 0 I would.
So obviously the amp gets one star, if I could give 0 I would.
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A
Excellent
Excellent piece of hardware, highly recommended
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O
Great for practice. Classic Marshall tones. With additional booster pedal, no need anything.
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G
top amplifier
using this amp daley, what a animal, i play a gibson SG thru it and it sounds absolutley wonderfull !!!
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FC
I´m amazed
I´m surprise how loud this actually is. Sound is quite clear and with good definition. If you are looking for a amplifier to study or even to jam with your friends, look no further.
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