wilerty
Well-known member
I have been looking for an amp to replace my Twin. I only play at home, mostly clean, but needed a lower powered amp that could still give me the Twin sound. On paper and in reviews, the 5:50 seemed like it was what I was looking for. But no matter how is sounds in the store, you never know till you get it home.
This is the most impressive low and mid-powered amp, I have ever owned or played. At 50 watts, it is the twin sound and so much more. What has been more impressive is at 5 watts. I can sit in my basement and get all these great sounds at low volume levels I never thought possible.
I used an ME-50 or a GT-8 with the Twin for delay, reverb, and sometimes distortion and other effects. Although the reverb on the 5:50 is better than the Twin, I still will probably use another reverb also. I probably will be able to get rid of the processors and just have a reverb and delay or maybe the new Boss RE-20 Space Echo when that comes out.
I've been playing for 46 years and have always loved the Twin sound. But for what the 5:50 gives you for $150 more, it is a no-brainer ... unless you play in a stadium. The flexability, articulation, contours, and modes make this a tough amp to beat ... not even mentioning quality and reliability.
This is the most impressive low and mid-powered amp, I have ever owned or played. At 50 watts, it is the twin sound and so much more. What has been more impressive is at 5 watts. I can sit in my basement and get all these great sounds at low volume levels I never thought possible.
I used an ME-50 or a GT-8 with the Twin for delay, reverb, and sometimes distortion and other effects. Although the reverb on the 5:50 is better than the Twin, I still will probably use another reverb also. I probably will be able to get rid of the processors and just have a reverb and delay or maybe the new Boss RE-20 Space Echo when that comes out.
I've been playing for 46 years and have always loved the Twin sound. But for what the 5:50 gives you for $150 more, it is a no-brainer ... unless you play in a stadium. The flexability, articulation, contours, and modes make this a tough amp to beat ... not even mentioning quality and reliability.