@@yogieyo9935 no it doesn't. He says crunch and it shows crunch. Except at the end of the crunch demo at 7:13, when he says "that's(that was) a little taste of the crunch channel", then shows a pic of the lead channel selected because he's about to demo the lead channel at that point. And just got done with the crunch channel.
@@ParaBellum2024 same here, R1, Revstar 820CR, LS6, Clavinova, everything high quality. Now wandering about this THR30 , having already my dream amp VOX AC15HW1 ( trying GAS resistance, haha)
@@gillesgenete9598 I'm GASing for a Vox AC15! I don't have a low-watts valve amp, and I like the look of the Vox, and offerings from Laney and Marshall too.
@@ParaBellum2024 vox ac have a very specific tone , so different from marshall. In my mind ac for strat/single coils, marshall for les paul/humbucker. If you're after hard rock with Marshall, you may consider Blackstar as well. I'm a strat/vox/bluesrock addict : Rory Gallagher is my idol .
@@gillesgenete9598 I've had a Blackstar amp (HT Club 40) and it was ok, but the sound lacked character. I prefer single coils over humbuckers, and tend to play clean/edge of breakup rather than saturated.
There's SO MUCH more in the app. There's about a dozen cabinet models, there's a compressor and gate, which have some pretty fine controls available. All of the effects and reverbs all have better controls in the app. The desktop app does the same stuff via USB cable, though you need an old USB B cable. I wish Yamaha had caught up with modern times and had gone with a USB C port for computer AND charging. It also sounds very good as a Bluetooth speaker for just playing music through, though there are only 3 EQ presets (available via the app). I bought the amp as my "getting back into playing guitar" amp after a ~20 year hiatus, and I'm WAY happy with it. Would definitely recommend it to anyone.
Weeell, I use my phone for calls and texting, not a single program installed (the name is program, not "app" ;-) ). So PC and USB it is. Hope it supports Linux.
I love this little amp. It does it all. I took it on vacation and used it as a bluetooth speaker to play some tunes and also brought my guitar along and jammed to backing tracks on the deck. This is my go to amp in my studio, no cables just plug in the Line 6 and ready your ready to play. This unit sounds so much better than the Spark amp. Great review.
I'm not an app guy but the app with the Yamaha is super easy and really brings the amp alive particularly being able to change the cabinet configuration..WOW!
I love this amp. Bought it a month ago and haven't played anything else since. It's just so convenient, sounds great, and the 30 watt version is a lot louder than I expected.
I love my THR30IIW amp. It is by far the best sounding portable amp i've ever tried. It sounds like a real amp with very good tube tones. I almost bought a spark which is a good lil amp but does not sound as good as the Yamaha. Just tried the Yamaha at the music store for kicks and was sold. I can't believe the sound of this small amp!!
This is the amp that got me back into guitar. Plug in a set of headphones and without annoying your neighbors, you can be Angus Young playing in a stadium, or Jason Mraz in a sound room.
Glad you reviewed this amp darrell. I bought one recently and it's awesome! One other great feature to note about using the app is that although there's only spring and hall reverb on the actual amp, you can access plate and room reverb. Which can be fine tuned and saved to the amp. Sounds really cool. Also there's a compression pedal on the app plus a handful of speaker cabinet options which are noticeably different. Great review. Great amp!
I've got the original thr10c and thr10x. Love them both. Insanely fun to practice on and take to work so I can play on my breaks. I was tempted to pick up these new ones, but they don't offer a huge enough improvement over mine to justify rebuying the amp. I am still extremely tempted to grab the THR100h dual head and Yamaha 2x12 cab to get the same great sound with more versatility at any volume level.
The THRX is the bust sounding amp for rock and metal I've ever heard. I've played all their THR models but this little thing screams like a wall of Marshalls. They say the 30 has all the sounds of the other amps but it just isn't true. I've heard they are discontinuing the X so if I were you I'd hold on to that one. And as for all those dudes paying tens of thousands of dollars for old Marshalls and pedals trying to chase Van Halens Brown sound. If they only knew!!!! I bought one and sold it afterwards no amp sounded good to me. I wen't right back to the store and Paid a hundred bucks extra to get my own amp back. Worth every penny.
I’ve had the thr10 ii for about a year now, and it continues to amaze me... every setting sounds so good. It’s pretty amazing that the clean setting can sound like a fender tube amp, then flick it over to hi gain and it sounds like a JCM800 Marshall... i have a Marshall DSL1 and I swear my Yamaha sounds more like a hi-gain Marshall than my Marshall!
I have DSL5CR and red channel sounds good only when amp is cranked to unbearable volumes for the home use. And 0.5 W mode does not sounds good and is still too loud to crank. So, in our days indeed digital recreations of tube amps sounds better than the real tube amps in a bedroom environments.
I have the THR10, and it's the first amp I've ever owned that really gives me a sound I'm 100% happy with. It's not exaggerating to say it sounds stunning. lol (BTW, I come from a vintage amp background and have probably owned 50+ amplifiers over the years).
Straight away, I’m hooked on the Boutique setting just as Darrel demo’d here! I’ve got 2 kit amps I’ve put together with my son, and they really pop with my old Axis! I just might have to give this lil’ Yamaha amp a shot! 😎👍
I have bought this amp for home use 2 weeks ago after a long hesitation between him and the Boss katana mk2 and Katana air and I have chosen the Yamaha for the great clean sound in classic, the battery and wireless features. I also prefer the app of yamaha available on phone and tablet and very simple to use. No need to connect it to computer. I really love this amp. I play with a Yamaha Revstar RS620. Yes I am a Yamaha fan :)
Yeah, I’m looking for a new amp and that’s my biggest concern… I don’t have or use a PC anymore, so a mobile app is the deciding factor for me. I’m thinking a THR10ii for myself as a beginner. I just want the three band EQ and as many onboard effects as possible with space being important but not the deciding factor
@@dommadonia9207 I payed about 500$, but it was here in Norway. I am not sure where to buy it elsewhere. This also included two years of service at the store.
I’ve had the little THR5 for a few years now. Love it. Even though it’s not as high tech as this 30, it still models 5 amps; Clean = Fender Twin Crunch = VOX AC30 Lead = Marshall Plexi Brit Hi = Marshall JCM 800 Modern = Mesa Boogie Rectifier It also has the bass/mid/treble EQ, the same two effects dials, and the auxiliary input. SO MUCH FUN and it runs on 6 AA batteries!
Bought the Black THR30II = Love it. I have never played so-much-guitar. It's always ( right there & ready to go ) = portable & Inspiring tones. Great Job Darrell ( as usual ). oNe LoVe from NYC
I believe that with this Amp in particular they dialed the sound to make sure and emulate the original tube transistors amps of old. That's why there's a glowing orange light inside
Started a few years ago with the THRC and went for this one too, because of the inside battery, a little more power and the wireless receiver inside. I love them both, they make me play more and even longer. Great sounds at low volume, easy to take along wherever you wanna go.
I had the THR10X and loved it. When they came out with the new version I was going to get the 30 but it was out of stock. I ended up buying the new spark amp but it sounded like crap. Sent it back and ended up getting the thr10ii. Sounds great and costs a little less. The rechargeable battery, wireless receiver and line outs were not really important to me.
I want to say, it´s just verry much more than an practice amp. O stage you can use it as a monitore, and conectet from the outputs into the PA, it works like a big tube ampliier. Only needing no microphone. The Boos SD1 works pefekt with it. Also all the other pedal effekts. Yes, a guitar, this little guy, some cables and you are ready to gig 🙂
Nice review, Darrell. I have an older THC10C that has served me well for several years. Not as much power as the one here, but good tones, lots of variety, and excellent build quality. I've never used mine on battery power - always plugged it in.
Very nice overview! I have many amps, and this gets used way more than any of my others. It also does a decent job with an acoustic. I realize you can not cover everything in a short review, but the app opens up a huge amount of additional sounds! Also, there are a ton of great presets made by owners/fans available online for free. My only complaint is, for the price, Yamaha should have included the Line 6 wireless transmitter - especially since they own the company now.
I own this amp. I'll say, when I first got it, I was very dissapointed because I've been using an all tube Marshall DSL 40 with an MXR Super Badass Distortion through the clean channel (which is actually quite nice). Anyway, my point is that this amp probably won't wow you with the sound quality, but the accessibility and ease of use is huge. It took me a little while to realize this. Now I often hook up to this to practice instead of getting my nice rig set up. All that being said, the sound quality is much better than many practice amps, and while I feel it lacks clarity, it really does have tube feel and sound. Also, the speakers in it are just amazing, try playing a song through them with bluetooth. I can't recommend this amp enough to players of any level. While it is expensive, you can always opt for the THRII 10 instead, which is 50 bucks cheaper and is also noticably lighter. That's actually what I have, and I could never need it to be any louder. Also, I can't remember how long they say the battery lasts (I think they estimate about 5 hours), but you really can get the time they advertise out of the battery.
I was surprised to see all the wattage versions on the thr2. I think the 1 just had one major model? I'd imagine most everyone would just need the lowest wattage model. Maybe they can afford to have lots of models, but it seems like it'd add on to overhead and inventory.
@@tonybowen455 I think you're mixing it up actually. The first generation had many different versions. The second generation has been streamlined down into a 30 watt version (THR30IIW) and a 20 watt version (which is actually what the THR10IIW is). There's also the the THR10II, which doesn't have the battery or the built in wireless capabilities. The first generation had multiple wattages, but more significantly, 3 different amp styles, each with 5 different channels. The second generation (all 3 of them) takes all the channels of the first generation and puts them all into one amp, giving you 15 amp channels.
@@WeeFreeMan78 Well not exactly actually. The THR30II is 30w and the THR10II is 20w. In the first series, all of the models that were listed at 10w were actually 10w, not 20. The THR5 was is actually 10w. Then of course they offered a 100w head for the first generation, while the second generation has no head. Also, I forgot to mention, but there's also one other variation of the amp for the first series, but it's pretty much exclusively designed for electric-acoustics. The new generation has that feature incorporated as well.
Thank you so much! Yamaha has been the block of flats living family friendly company the last 10 years with quality amps and sounds. This THR 30 is what I was searching for since the first thr 5 came out. Now add wireless function and lithium balltery and we are ready to rock 2020!!
I have the THR10X, and am planning on upgrading to the newer 10 watt version. These things sound amazing for what they are, as I regularly bounce back and forth between 6 string electric and bass guitar. These handle both.
There's a picture of Robert Fripp of King Crimson in red slippers playing a Helix through a White Yamaha THR30 set up for recording. If it's good enough for Robert Fripp, it's good enough for me. (Actually I have the Black THRC. It's a nice little amp.)
Great review. Another good reason to buy this amp is it’s built in wireless capability when paired with a Line 6 G10 Relay receiver. I would buy one if I didn’t already have the THR10C. I think of my Yamaha as a desktop Matchless DC30 because I leave it at that setting for 90% of my playing.
Bought this exact model and despite the price tag it has exceeded expectation. so much well thought out technology packed in there. The Line 6 G10 wireless plug in works well (motion sensing turns it on and off if left plugged into the guitar). As a note though the G10 will not transmit with some acoustic guitars but there are some work arounds from Line 6 apparently. Plugged directly into the amp my acoustic sounds almost as good as a stand alone acoustic amp. Great for streaming music and jam tracks.
Darrell, this is the best review I have seen and I watched dozen of them on Utube. Did you leave the accoustic guitar on the snow roof? I have just bought the cream Yamaha TR30llW. No more wires, rechargeable Batterie and no more jack to jack, thanks to the line 6 radio device. I bought it for the natural amp sound, the slick design and to listen to my IPAD radio thanks to the Yamaha blue tooth. I got the portable Yamaha matching travelling bag too! For me it is the best desktop practice amp.
I have the predecessor to this one, not gonna lie the sounds are a huge step up. Okay, I got it out of my holiday suitcase and plugged in, not gonna lie, old one has some really cool tones as well.
@@surfinjim I own neither but I've heard many demos of both. At that size, both are compromises in the room sound for sure. But between the Spark and this, this sounds way better to me. But I have a negative bias (no pun intended) about the Spark to begin with as I own Bias FX (old and new versions) and could never get a usable tone of of it. Bias FX sounds digital and fake to me with weird high end artefacts. I do not hear that here but I do hear it in the Spark, especially with cruch and higher gain tones. It's not the old Pods "fizz", it's weirder than that. Yes the Yamaha is a bit boxy in the room and all but so is the Spark and it's normal with these speaker and enclosure sizes. My Katana head is serviceable as a practice amp but sounds nothing like when I plug it into my 4x12. A 5 inch speaker just can't. The Yamaha from what I'm reading has 2 x 3.5" speakers so it is what it is too in the room. Not sure about the Spark but it's a higher wattage so should sound better on paper. I just doesn't to me in demos. I assume we were hearing the room sound here. If that was through USB or line outs, that's way less convincing.
I've got the spark and thr10x ( metal version ) and honestly the yamaha is far better overall as a amp my main complaint is rock / metal stuff on the spark is very muddy and bass heavy for blues stuff it's quite good but that's the only use I have for it I'm hoping there's a update or new revision of the spark that improves the sound but until then I just have a expensive speaker system
@Kizzy C lol sponsorships I hate it when a popular youtuber gets handed a musical piece and has to lie about what it can / can't do when i was checking out reviews I thought it was a great amp in video demos but when I tried it well it was all hype
@@And1slash I respectfully disagree. This amp is top of the bill for clean country rock and Heavy stuff. But from what i see in your name you probably are looking for that special metal sound? And the THR cannot please you in that way?
Thanks Darrell, I have the THR10II and love it! it is amazing the tones you get from this little amp. Although the App features are okay, I do prefer to dial it in the old fashion way. The 10ii version doesn't have a battery or built-in wireless but I use a third party wireless audio receiver and works perfectly.
I spent tons of cash on amps(Ibanez tube, Vox, Yerasov tube, nux) before bought yamaha thr5 this summer. This little box is absolutely enought for home.
well, i've had mine now for about 3 weeks. so far, i think it's fantastic. i'm still exploring it but it's solid and sounds much bigger than it is. it's pricey but appears to me to have gotten what i paid for. I recommend it
With the exception of the battery and the proper line outs, the possitive grid is 95% of what that thing is for a third the price. I wish you would have talked about the speaker in it, how loud it gets ect. Also if there's lights, turn the lights out and film them! :) Love your videos
I ordered both for comparison and sold the Spark a day after the Yamaha arrived. It's not a bad amp at all but I liked the THR's tones a little more and its portability can't be beat. The Spark is definitely louder and bassier.
Except yamaha is the only one who has this modeling thing down to a science and nothing comes close to the sound! It literally sounds like a boutique amp that costs $5000 !! You can dial in tones that are unbelievable tube quality warmth and response it doesn't sound solid state whatsoever
Amazing lifestyle guitar accessory. This and the katana air are probably the best tinker around setups. That being said, these will never replace you're blues jr let alone twin or similar.
I had a Blues Jr & sold it because I mainly play at home, and I was never happy with the sound at low volumes. That's the point. The THR is designed to sound good at low volumes, and it does.
@@DarrellBraunGuitar How does it or is it not possible to truly compare to the Spark 40 (which I have)? Or are they both so different it's hard to compare apples to apples? Thanks!
@@sixstringfun I’ve tried both and Yamaha is miles ahead of the spark. The spark has an issue with being too boomy and has grounding issues with the power supply. Yamaha does not have as many effects as the spark but it does not need them, you can get an amazing tone right out of the box. The one thing the spark has going for it is the tone cloud which lets you download other user presents, but other than that yamaha does everything better.
I've used the THR10 and THR10X for years. The THR30 is a worthy upgrade to both of those amps--which I still love. You really can't go wrong with it. If you've never played a THR, then you'll be in for a big surprise.
Lots of reviews for these little amps. Most everyone seems to like them and I'm sure they are as good as everyone says. But......to be fair, I'm pretty sure this guy could plug a guitar into a cardboard box with a cheap 3 inch 10 watt speaker in it and make it sound amazing. : ).
I must have three or four of this type of amp. A Roland, Cube and a Yamaha version like this one. I have to say, this Yamaha is pretty darn good. Under $200, and plenty of play time and very decent tones and effects. And when playing in a campfire situation, outside, acoustic guitar with a clip in pickup, makes a Martin 12 String sound amazing in the evening breezes. So, YES, this little amp has some jam. Thanks for your review. Your videos are good. Easy to watch. Great job.
I have the 10ii and it’s the perfect apartment solution. The amp and speaker combos are great and the heritage of Line 6’s amp modeling really pairs well with the Yamaha designed, home theatre like speakers. Works well as a stand-alone Bluetooth speaker too.
Darrell, when are you going to compare the Spark to the Yamaha? You've reviewed them both. How about a head to head for those trying to decide which to buy?
Yeah I would really like a head to head between these amps. Can't decide! I think the Spark is more versatile with its tab and jamming features but don't know!
I have the yamaha thr10x and the spark. The spark has a lot more options but imo the yamaha sounds much better. It sounds livelier and more airy than the spark. I bought the spark thinking it would replace the yamaha , nope I'm still playing my yamaha!
@@dragnasty540 thanks for the post. That is helpful. I'd still like to see a feature for feature comparison video done though. And @Darrell braun guitar if you're listening I'd like to have the sound from the actual speakers not through the USB to computer since that is the way most of us will be using it.
I had both, along with many other desktop amps, and the Yamaha is significantly better than the Spark. The Spark has a lot of killer features like tonecloud, limitless pedals and a great app. However, the chord finder and backing drummer is not good enough to be useable, and those were the features apart from the various tones that set it apart. The sound is very bass heavy, with a boxy muffled sound on almost every tone. There is also a grounding issue on them that causes hum. Dimension size it is also much bigger and heavier than the THR10. You would be pretty happy with it if you have not listened to other desktop amps. The THR10 has a boxy sound only on a few tones, the rest of them are very spatial and clear. It is pretty easy to use with lots of tones, enough to get whichever tone you want dialed in, despite not having as many as the Spark. The THR overall wins and would recommend over the Spark. However, if you factor in other amps like the Nux Mighty Plug and Mighty Air, you may want to pick those. They have very nice signal processing and spatial sound. My most used is still the THR.
Thee best table top guitar amplifier has certainly got to be the Vox Pathfinder 10, 10 watts, 6" diameter British Bulldog speaker, beautiful design and quality build/workmanship. It sounds fantastic and can play loud. It has a button for a high gain channel. The sound is the best among almost all my amps with the Fender '59 Bassman LTD and Vox AC15C1 sounding better. It sells everyday for $89 and is also on sale for $79 twice a year everywhere. The best part is the tone. If you play by feel and mood then the Vox Pathfinder 10 shall be a real inspirational amp for you. The fact that it's smaller and lighter and much less expensive than the offering here is just icing on the cake.
I have this amp and it is amazing. I returned my spark amp and then bought this. The Spark has impressive sounds, but I just find this one to be better. Today (oct 28 2020) they launched a firmware update that changes de way sound is output through the speakers that made the amp even better.
@@rebelcat420 I definitely recommend it. The Spark is so hot right now that it’d probably be an easy sale. Just consider that this amp is worth 500 bucks, about double the spark.
@@abd-ix5qd you need to do it vía usb with your laptop . You need to download the latest the remote app, and once you have it connected, click the settings icon and you’ll se an option to update it.
I have had one for about 7 months. Using on commercial breaks of Chiefs game. Very fun to play with all the sounds and different cabs in the app. The tuner does not always work on the high E. Only complaint. Use it as a Bluetooth speaker on the patio when not playing guitar.
I have the older thr10. Absolutely love the hall stereo sound & portability. Even use pedals with it. Acoustic or electric, it’s my most used amp. May have to retire it in favor the newer, “bigger” model.
Thanks for this. I have the THR5 and was looking to upgrade, thought about the THR10II but maybe I ought to just go big or go home. I like that all the amp settings are onboard (on the 10II you access most via the app). I'm not an app guy, I wanna plug and play, so that's appealing. Thanks for this look and demo!
To me this is not just "an amp", but combined with the line 6 g10 it's EVERYTHING BUT my guitar, as a beginner... I literally don't even own a guitar cable yet! Still I can do pretty much EVERYTHING that comes to mind! 😲😲 Literally the only thing I could think of: Can I play Rocksmith like that? Via the PC out? Or will I need the specific cable? - But besides that, I can't come up with a single location, style of music, practicing regime or even playing position logistically, that I couldn't cover between 1 guitar and this thing bought as combo with g10... Crazy!
I've had the THR 10c for a while. Initially didn't bond with it, but now love it and found that you can really sculpt the sound you want with the controls. It's a delicious sound without the need to be loud and therefore will save your ears in later life. I've seen repeatedly that people say the Spark is too bassy and the sound quality isn't as good as the THR.
Cool video. I recall the first edition but never played thru one. Did buy a Spark and learning my way. Lots of mileage from the crunch channel. No phone but inspiring for the classic hard rock (LS, UFO, TL, etc ) i love. I do like the graphic around the effect and delay knobs on the Yamaha. Sorta reminds me of my first gen MicroCube. Spark i guess does the same thing.
Any recommendations for a no-frills desktop amp with a bright clean channel? Don’t need any built-in effects or gain/drive effects, just need a small 10-30W amp
When i first saw THR30 i thought that I found the best amp for my schedule. Unfortunately, there's a few flaws that rarely pop-up in mind/reviews. Only now I got that my point of view was the thing that converted situational flaw to a big no-no. So lets check the red flags. Little background: I do play a lot in my apartment, but most of the time I take guitar to jam with my friends, busk on a street or play on a small gig. So the most important thing is pair of sound quality and power independence. First of all: This is a desktop amp for home and small gigs usage. Audio interface is really neat, but not a must have feature for me, personally. My biggest concern was li-ion battery. According to manufacturer info - it holds for 4-5 hours. But li-ion batteries tend to wear with time, for example like on smartphones after year and a half most smartphones start to charge slower and use power much faster. The thing is that it's a custom battery that would be a real pain in the ass to replace. For example old fashion roland micro cube uses AA batteries, where you can use rechargeable ones, and hold down in your pocket additional one or two replacement packs. You basically cant run out of battery power when you thought ahead of yourself. On THR you rely on a constant recharge if you spend most of your time outside. Second problem is the smartphone connection. There's a lot of built in features that you cant control from the amp itself. Effect types, cabinet simulation, wave forms and other stuff. You can setup your presets at home, but you're limited to 5 slots, and they clearly had enough room on amp to remove smartphone dependancy, but with some intent they didn't. Unexpected thing is that in a few years Yamaha may cancel support of an app for older/newer smartphones, and you'll be forced to buy a new product, or take another phone which is compatible with old app, just to tweak your sound as you like. For example I got my audio interface from my older brother, because with firmware update MAudio canceled their support for profire interface on newest OS at the time, so that became unusable with Mac (*Happy win 7 user screeching*). That's mostly not a really big problem. Imo, amp is great, but I looked at that with different angle. For street or open air gigs old roland cubes or maybe a Boss Katana would be a better solution.
@Alex Hays That's a piece of gear that suppose to serve your needs. When I saw THR - I thought that this is the best solution for street gigs. Something like an updated street cube. But then I did my research and find out cons that i've talk about previously. Theres a lot of people which cannot afford bying new gear every now and then, and such detailed and subjective info is not often found around.
So basically you're whining for stuff that is the same on every damn digital device on the market, and don't even get it right because there's also a pc app you can use.
Using the app you are not limited to the 5 memory slots on the amp itself. You can store unlimited presets on your smartphone and load them through the app.
Yamaha never in tented the thr series to be a busking amp, on the contrary they very clearly advertised it as a desktop practice amp. If you go busking, Roland is your toy man, not this
Saved you a watch. Yes it's perfect. I own one and it gives me the dynamics of playing loud while my family sleeps. I use it daily multiple hours. Yamaha is insane. Also watch it cos dbg is sick
Those effects knob look a lot like line 6 which I love line 6 and since Yamaha bought line 6 in 2014 why not. Will have to get me one of these. Love the tones he played.
Man these small desktop amps are getting so awesome!
Enjoy :)
Great video Darrell, but I gotta ask- do you still have your Shijie STE? How is it, do you still play it?
when you say crunch, on the screen it shows lead
I loved my thr 10x but 450 bucks steeeeeeep for this and the wireless dongle another 100 ouch we’re talking 6 bills after tax for an practice amp
@@yogieyo9935 no it doesn't. He says crunch and it shows crunch. Except at the end of the crunch demo at 7:13, when he says "that's(that was) a little taste of the crunch channel", then shows a pic of the lead channel selected because he's about to demo the lead channel at that point. And just got done with the crunch channel.
Nice little amp, but I love my Spark.
Does Yamaha make anything that is not great? You always get your money’s worth and they really care about sound. Love their gear!
I've always said "You can't go wrong with Yamaha", whether it's a guitar, a keyboard, an amp or a motor cycle! All of which I've owned.
@@ParaBellum2024 same here, R1, Revstar 820CR, LS6, Clavinova, everything high quality. Now wandering about this THR30 , having already my dream amp VOX AC15HW1 ( trying GAS resistance, haha)
@@gillesgenete9598 I'm GASing for a Vox AC15! I don't have a low-watts valve amp, and I like the look of the Vox, and offerings from Laney and Marshall too.
@@ParaBellum2024 vox ac have a very specific tone , so different from marshall. In my mind ac for strat/single coils, marshall for les paul/humbucker. If you're after hard rock with Marshall, you may consider Blackstar as well. I'm a strat/vox/bluesrock addict : Rory Gallagher is my idol .
@@gillesgenete9598 I've had a Blackstar amp (HT Club 40) and it was ok, but the sound lacked character. I prefer single coils over humbuckers, and tend to play clean/edge of breakup rather than saturated.
There's SO MUCH more in the app. There's about a dozen cabinet models, there's a compressor and gate, which have some pretty fine controls available. All of the effects and reverbs all have better controls in the app. The desktop app does the same stuff via USB cable, though you need an old USB B cable. I wish Yamaha had caught up with modern times and had gone with a USB C port for computer AND charging.
It also sounds very good as a Bluetooth speaker for just playing music through, though there are only 3 EQ presets (available via the app).
I bought the amp as my "getting back into playing guitar" amp after a ~20 year hiatus, and I'm WAY happy with it. Would definitely recommend it to anyone.
I did the same, never got a good amp.
Running with the wireless adapter with the guitar through the room is so much fun.
Thanks for all the additional info
Spot on, I was going to point exactly the same things out - got the cheaper THR10ii, and extremely happy with it
Weeell, I use my phone for calls and texting, not a single program installed (the name is program, not "app" ;-) ).
So PC and USB it is. Hope it supports Linux.
@@iwonttell4958 Instead of your phone, you could use a tablet to use those apps.
I saw this in a music store for YEARS and thought that it was just a head. I had no idea that it was a full combo amp.
I love this little amp. It does it all. I took it on vacation and used it as a bluetooth speaker to play some tunes and also brought my guitar along and jammed to backing tracks on the deck. This is my go to amp in my studio, no cables just plug in the Line 6 and ready your ready to play. This unit sounds so much better than the Spark amp. Great review.
Do you still like it?
I've had one of the THR10's for over 5 years now. It was a gamechanger when it came out and still sounds great.
That's my amp! And I have it on my desk!!
Do you like it?
Me too! Hard to find something better for an apartment. I love that thing!
Lol
@TeapotMullah 😹😹😹😹
Same here. And I bloody love it. Best bang for the buck I've ever spent on guitar 🎸
I'm not an app guy but the app with the Yamaha is super easy and really brings the amp alive particularly being able to change the cabinet configuration..WOW!
I love this amp. Bought it a month ago and haven't played anything else since. It's just so convenient, sounds great, and the 30 watt version is a lot louder than I expected.
@andydguitar I haven't tried any pedals with it yet, since I haven't really needed to, but I will give it a try.
I love my THR30IIW amp. It is by far the best sounding portable amp i've ever tried. It sounds like a real amp with very good tube tones. I almost bought a spark which is a good lil amp but does not sound as good as the Yamaha. Just tried the Yamaha at the music store for kicks and was sold. I can't believe the sound of this small amp!!
A Small and portable amp that makes for much quality is definitely awesome! Great showcase!
This is the amp that got me back into guitar. Plug in a set of headphones and without annoying your neighbors, you can be Angus Young playing in a stadium, or Jason Mraz in a sound room.
Glad you reviewed this amp darrell. I bought one recently and it's awesome! One other great feature to note about using the app is that although there's only spring and hall reverb on the actual amp, you can access plate and room reverb. Which can be fine tuned and saved to the amp. Sounds really cool. Also there's a compression pedal on the app plus a handful of speaker cabinet options which are noticeably different. Great review. Great amp!
I've got the original thr10c and thr10x. Love them both. Insanely fun to practice on and take to work so I can play on my breaks. I was tempted to pick up these new ones, but they don't offer a huge enough improvement over mine to justify rebuying the amp. I am still extremely tempted to grab the THR100h dual head and Yamaha 2x12 cab to get the same great sound with more versatility at any volume level.
The THRX is the bust sounding amp for rock and metal I've ever heard. I've played all their THR models but this little thing screams like a wall of Marshalls. They say the 30 has all the sounds of the other amps but it just isn't true. I've heard they are discontinuing the X so if I were you I'd hold on to that one. And as for all those dudes paying tens of thousands of dollars for old Marshalls and pedals trying to chase Van Halens Brown sound. If they only knew!!!! I bought one and sold it afterwards no amp sounded good to me. I wen't right back to the store and Paid a hundred bucks extra to get my own amp back. Worth every penny.
I’ve had the thr10 ii for about a year now, and it continues to amaze me... every setting sounds so good. It’s pretty amazing that the clean setting can sound like a fender tube amp, then flick it over to hi gain and it sounds like a JCM800 Marshall... i have a Marshall DSL1 and I swear my Yamaha sounds more like a hi-gain Marshall than my Marshall!
I have DSL5CR and red channel sounds good only when amp is cranked to unbearable volumes for the home use. And 0.5 W mode does not sounds good and is still too loud to crank. So, in our days indeed digital recreations of tube amps sounds better than the real tube amps in a bedroom environments.
I have the THR10, and it's the first amp I've ever owned that really gives me a sound I'm 100% happy with. It's not exaggerating to say it sounds stunning. lol (BTW, I come from a vintage amp background and have probably owned 50+ amplifiers over the years).
Straight away, I’m hooked on the Boutique setting just as Darrel demo’d here! I’ve got 2 kit amps I’ve put together with my son, and they really pop with my old Axis!
I just might have to give this lil’ Yamaha amp a shot! 😎👍
Great video, thanks for sharing. Love what Yamaha are doing with the THR range.
I have bought this amp for home use 2 weeks ago after a long hesitation between him and the Boss katana mk2 and Katana air and I have chosen the Yamaha for the great clean sound in classic, the battery and wireless features. I also prefer the app of yamaha available on phone and tablet and very simple to use. No need to connect it to computer.
I really love this amp. I play with a Yamaha Revstar RS620. Yes I am a Yamaha fan :)
Yeah, I’m looking for a new amp and that’s my biggest concern… I don’t have or use a PC anymore, so a mobile app is the deciding factor for me. I’m thinking a THR10ii for myself as a beginner. I just want the three band EQ and as many onboard effects as possible with space being important but not the deciding factor
This should come with the Yamaha Pacifica. Package deal!
They did come as a package deal last summer. I got a Pasifica and the amp.
@@jonbeargenx really? How much and where? Great starter package. I want to get one for my great grandniece.
@@dommadonia9207 I payed about 500$, but it was here in Norway. I am not sure where to buy it elsewhere. This also included two years of service at the store.
@@jonbeargenx that's a fair deal I will see if any local shops here in Ohio has that deal. Thanks for the reply.
I’ve had the little THR5 for a few years now. Love it. Even though it’s not as high tech as this 30, it still models 5 amps;
Clean = Fender Twin
Crunch = VOX AC30
Lead = Marshall Plexi
Brit Hi = Marshall JCM 800
Modern = Mesa Boogie Rectifier
It also has the bass/mid/treble EQ, the same two effects dials, and the auxiliary input. SO MUCH FUN and it runs on 6 AA batteries!
Got the older th10...best piece of gear I have. This is the best table top amp on the market period
Bought the Black THR30II = Love it. I have never played so-much-guitar. It's always ( right there & ready to go ) = portable & Inspiring tones. Great Job Darrell ( as usual ). oNe LoVe from NYC
I believe that with this Amp in particular they dialed the sound to make sure and emulate the original tube transistors amps of old. That's why there's a glowing orange light inside
Using THR10X for 4 years, and it totally worth it's cost. One of the best things for desktop.
Will try 30 series probably next year.
I love my thr10 as a travel rig, good inexpensive amp, and desktop speaker for my computer
Started a few years ago with the THRC and went for this one too, because of the inside battery, a little more power and the wireless receiver inside.
I love them both, they make me play more and even longer. Great sounds at low volume, easy to take along wherever you wanna go.
I had the THR10X and loved it. When they came out with the new version I was going to get the 30 but it was out of stock. I ended up buying the new spark amp but it sounded like crap. Sent it back and ended up getting the thr10ii. Sounds great and costs a little less. The rechargeable battery, wireless receiver and line outs were not really important to me.
Fantastic looking amp. Love the cream colour as well.
I want to say, it´s just verry much more than an practice amp. O stage you can use it as a monitore, and conectet from the outputs into the PA, it works like a big tube ampliier. Only needing no microphone.
The Boos SD1 works pefekt with it. Also all the other pedal effekts.
Yes, a guitar, this little guy, some cables and you are ready to gig 🙂
Darrell is pumping out the content lately and I love it
Nice review, Darrell. I have an older THC10C that has served me well for several years. Not as much power as the one here, but good tones, lots of variety, and excellent build quality. I've never used mine on battery power - always plugged it in.
I have one right beside me in the living room. Does a lot of things really well. Great amp to sit in any room waiting to play.
Very nice overview! I have many amps, and this gets used way more than any of my others. It also does a decent job with an acoustic. I realize you can not cover everything in a short review, but the app opens up a huge amount of additional sounds! Also, there are a ton of great presets made by owners/fans available online for free. My only complaint is, for the price, Yamaha should have included the Line 6 wireless transmitter - especially since they own the company now.
Can't wait for the THR30ii and Spark 40 comparison. Thanks again for a great review!
I have the THR10X and I just strap it to my back and walk around town and play metal. Most people think it is hysterical - most. . . .
What do you connect it to tho? It's not wireless like this one is...
@@staszewaM I plug it in directly to my guitar.
@@fullclipaudio Your guitar has a power outlet? I mean the power supply, as THR10X needs to be connected to a power supply to work.
@@staszewaM It runs off of batteries.
@@fullclipaudio Oh, you're right. It does have one at the bottom, although the batteries are not supplied. How long do they last?
I own this amp. I'll say, when I first got it, I was very dissapointed because I've been using an all tube Marshall DSL 40 with an MXR Super Badass Distortion through the clean channel (which is actually quite nice). Anyway, my point is that this amp probably won't wow you with the sound quality, but the accessibility and ease of use is huge. It took me a little while to realize this.
Now I often hook up to this to practice instead of getting my nice rig set up. All that being said, the sound quality is much better than many practice amps, and while I feel it lacks clarity, it really does have tube feel and sound. Also, the speakers in it are just amazing, try playing a song through them with bluetooth. I can't recommend this amp enough to players of any level. While it is expensive, you can always opt for the THRII 10 instead, which is 50 bucks cheaper and is also noticably lighter. That's actually what I have, and I could never need it to be any louder. Also, I can't remember how long they say the battery lasts (I think they estimate about 5 hours), but you really can get the time they advertise out of the battery.
I was surprised to see all the wattage versions on the thr2. I think the 1 just had one major model? I'd imagine most everyone would just need the lowest wattage model. Maybe they can afford to have lots of models, but it seems like it'd add on to overhead and inventory.
@@tonybowen455 I think you're mixing it up actually. The first generation had many different versions. The second generation has been streamlined down into a 30 watt version (THR30IIW) and a 20 watt version (which is actually what the THR10IIW is). There's also the the THR10II, which doesn't have the battery or the built in wireless capabilities. The first generation had multiple wattages, but more significantly, 3 different amp styles, each with 5 different channels. The second generation (all 3 of them) takes all the channels of the first generation and puts them all into one amp, giving you 15 amp channels.
Actually all the first generation had the same wattage, just a difference in features and in chassis size when it comes to the thr5
@@WeeFreeMan78 Well not exactly actually. The THR30II is 30w and the THR10II is 20w. In the first series, all of the models that were listed at 10w were actually 10w, not 20. The THR5 was is actually 10w. Then of course they offered a 100w head for the first generation, while the second generation has no head. Also, I forgot to mention, but there's also one other variation of the amp for the first series, but it's pretty much exclusively designed for electric-acoustics. The new generation has that feature incorporated as well.
@@crazygamer6601 the channels are not the same as the first generation, they are some differences. They removed some of the models and added new ones.
great amp. love these commercials Darrell!
I've been looking at this for some time. You sold me on it. Better than all the other reviews I've seen.
I'm a drummer, but I've been watching a lot of your videos. Good stuff.
Thank you so much! Yamaha has been the block of flats living family friendly company the last 10 years with quality amps and sounds. This THR 30 is what I was searching for since the first thr 5 came out. Now add wireless function and lithium balltery and we are ready to rock 2020!!
I have the THR10X, and am planning on upgrading to the newer 10 watt version. These things sound amazing for what they are, as I regularly bounce back and forth between 6 string electric and bass guitar. These handle both.
There's a picture of Robert Fripp of King Crimson in red slippers playing a Helix through a White Yamaha THR30 set up for recording. If it's good enough for Robert Fripp, it's good enough for me. (Actually I have the Black THRC. It's a nice little amp.)
I love my 10. And the retro look is great, in a house full of antiques
Great review. Another good reason to buy this amp is it’s built in wireless capability when paired with a Line 6 G10 Relay receiver. I would buy one if I didn’t already have the THR10C. I think of my Yamaha as a desktop Matchless DC30 because I leave it at that setting for 90% of my playing.
Very intresting, what are the settings you made to reach the DC30 sound ? I'm a fan of the Vox AC30 sound , and I nearly heard it from Darrell's demo.
Hit like just from seeing your channel and THR together!!! Greeting from Thailand fan sir.
Bought this exact model and despite the price tag it has exceeded expectation. so much well thought out technology packed in there. The Line 6 G10 wireless plug in works well (motion sensing turns it on and off if left plugged into the guitar). As a note though the G10 will not transmit with some acoustic guitars but there are some work arounds from Line 6 apparently. Plugged directly into the amp my acoustic sounds almost as good as a stand alone acoustic amp. Great for streaming music and jam tracks.
Thank you! I was hoping someone would mention having tried this with an acoustic, and how it turned out.
These videos always make me wonder what my amps would sound like clean.
Thanks Darrell. Just ordered one from Long and McQuade. Can’t wait to try it out with my Emerald Virtuo.
Darrell, this is the best review I have seen and I watched dozen of them on Utube. Did you leave the accoustic guitar on the snow roof? I have just bought the cream Yamaha TR30llW. No more wires, rechargeable Batterie and no more jack to jack, thanks to the line 6 radio device. I bought it for the natural amp sound, the slick design and to listen to my IPAD radio thanks to the Yamaha blue tooth. I got the portable Yamaha matching travelling bag too! For me it is the best desktop practice amp.
I have the predecessor to this one, not gonna lie the sounds are a huge step up. Okay, I got it out of my holiday suitcase and plugged in, not gonna lie, old one has some really cool tones as well.
The Yamaha THR and Positive Grid Spark are both awesome amps. I would like to see which one Darrell likes better.
I'm definitely not Darrell but to me the Yamaha is 100x better than my Spark, which is very muddy
@@surfinjim I own neither but I've heard many demos of both. At that size, both are compromises in the room sound for sure.
But between the Spark and this, this sounds way better to me. But I have a negative bias (no pun intended) about the Spark to begin with as I own Bias FX (old and new versions) and could never get a usable tone of of it. Bias FX sounds digital and fake to me with weird high end artefacts. I do not hear that here but I do hear it in the Spark, especially with cruch and higher gain tones. It's not the old Pods "fizz", it's weirder than that. Yes the Yamaha is a bit boxy in the room and all but so is the Spark and it's normal with these speaker and enclosure sizes.
My Katana head is serviceable as a practice amp but sounds nothing like when I plug it into my 4x12. A 5 inch speaker just can't. The Yamaha from what I'm reading has 2 x 3.5" speakers so it is what it is too in the room. Not sure about the Spark but it's a higher wattage so should sound better on paper. I just doesn't to me in demos.
I assume we were hearing the room sound here. If that was through USB or line outs, that's way less convincing.
I've got the spark and thr10x ( metal version ) and honestly the yamaha is far better overall as a amp
my main complaint is rock / metal stuff on the spark is very muddy and bass heavy
for blues stuff it's quite good but that's the only use I have for it
I'm hoping there's a update or new revision of the spark that improves the sound but until then I just have a expensive speaker system
@Kizzy C lol sponsorships
I hate it when a popular youtuber gets handed a musical piece and has to lie about what it can / can't do
when i was checking out reviews I thought it was a great amp in video demos but when I tried it well it was all hype
@@And1slash I respectfully disagree. This amp is top of the bill for clean country rock and Heavy stuff. But from what i see in your name you probably are looking for that special metal sound? And the THR cannot please you in that way?
Thanks Darrell, I have the THR10II and love it! it is amazing the tones you get from this little amp. Although the App features are okay, I do prefer to dial it in the old fashion way. The 10ii version doesn't have a battery or built-in wireless but I use a third party wireless audio receiver and works perfectly.
Between this and the Monoprice 15w tube combo, a lot of good affordable options for home use these days!
Fantastic amp! Had mine for a couple of months and ive never experienced any problems or things it lacks. Would definitely recommend!
Damn, I nearly got one of these. Crazy how quality tone is now available for minimal dough.
I keep mine in the trunk with my Traveller guitar. I love it. Best money I have ever spent on a piece of gear
I bought that amp last week and I love it!
I love this little amp, I must have one. I already have the Spark but I want both! Thanks for the great review Darrell.
Please Yamaha give us a software update for a built in looper and come out with a wireless pedal. Would be the perfect bedroom/ practice amp
Did they do it
I spent tons of cash on amps(Ibanez tube, Vox, Yerasov tube, nux) before bought yamaha thr5 this summer. This little box is absolutely enought for home.
I have a THR10X and absolutely love it.
well, i've had mine now for about 3 weeks. so far, i think it's fantastic. i'm still exploring it but it's solid and sounds much bigger than it is. it's pricey but appears to me to have gotten what i paid for.
I recommend it
Nice little unit... Good sound!
With the exception of the battery and the proper line outs, the possitive grid is 95% of what that thing is for a third the price. I wish you would have talked about the speaker in it, how loud it gets ect. Also if there's lights, turn the lights out and film them!
:) Love your videos
I ordered both for comparison and sold the Spark a day after the Yamaha arrived. It's not a bad amp at all but I liked the THR's tones a little more and its portability can't be beat. The Spark is definitely louder and bassier.
Except yamaha is the only one who has this modeling thing down to a science and nothing comes close to the sound! It literally sounds like a boutique amp that costs $5000 !! You can dial in tones that are unbelievable tube quality warmth and response it doesn't sound solid state whatsoever
I owned a Spark, sold it and bought the THR II 30. I enjoyed the Spark's practice-oriented software, but the Yamaha blows it away otherwise IMO.
@@Stereostupid spark is the same way. I mean I haven't put them side by side so I don't know but it seems pretty close bonestly
@@Stereostupid Lmao no it won't sound like a 5k boutique amp lmao. It sounds very good for what it is, a compact desktop amp.
Amazing lifestyle guitar accessory. This and the katana air are probably the best tinker around setups. That being said, these will never replace you're blues jr let alone twin or similar.
I had a Blues Jr & sold it because I mainly play at home, and I was never happy with the sound at low volumes. That's the point. The THR is designed to sound good at low volumes, and it does.
I’m gonna gift this to my son on his 18th Birthday. He’ll be born in the next 6 months. ;-)
I have had my eye on this one for a bit. Getting closer to finally pulling the trigger. Love these desktop amps!
Night and day compared to the practice amps I had growing up that's for sure!!
@@DarrellBraunGuitar How does it or is it not possible to truly compare to the Spark 40 (which I have)? Or are they both so different it's hard to compare apples to apples? Thanks!
@@sixstringfun I’ve tried both and Yamaha is miles ahead of the spark. The spark has an issue with being too boomy and has grounding issues with the power supply. Yamaha does not have as many effects as the spark but it does not need them, you can get an amazing tone right out of the box. The one thing the spark has going for it is the tone cloud which lets you download other user presents, but other than that yamaha does everything better.
@@sixstringfun the sound quality is better on the yamaha, It's sounds more like a "real" amp IMO.
I've used the THR10 and THR10X for years. The THR30 is a worthy upgrade to both of those amps--which I still love. You really can't go wrong with it. If you've never played a THR, then you'll be in for a big surprise.
Lots of reviews for these little amps. Most everyone seems to like them and I'm sure they are as good as everyone says. But......to be fair, I'm pretty sure this guy could plug a guitar into a cardboard box with a cheap 3 inch 10 watt speaker in it and make it sound amazing. : ).
Finally a video about a product I actually own. I use it with the Line6 Relay G10 wireless, it works great.
I must have three or four of this type of amp. A Roland, Cube and a Yamaha version like this one. I have to say, this Yamaha is pretty darn good. Under $200, and plenty of play time and very decent tones and effects. And when playing in a campfire situation, outside, acoustic guitar with a clip in pickup, makes a Martin 12 String sound amazing in the evening breezes. So, YES, this little amp has some jam. Thanks for your review. Your videos are good. Easy to watch. Great job.
I have the 10ii and it’s the perfect apartment solution. The amp and speaker combos are great and the heritage of Line 6’s amp modeling really pairs well with the Yamaha designed, home theatre like speakers. Works well as a stand-alone Bluetooth speaker too.
im thinking thr10ii or the vox adio..
@@mattyburrows9059 the yamaha sounds way more organic/natural imo.
Great review Darrell I've got one and love it. The amp can also be used for bass and acoustic guitar and the flat option allows a keyboard
I love lo play guitar through the flat mode on my THR10, it just sounds so clear and balanced on those little speakers.
Darrell, when are you going to compare the Spark to the Yamaha? You've reviewed them both. How about a head to head for those trying to decide which to buy?
Yeah I would really like a head to head between these amps. Can't decide! I think the Spark is more versatile with its tab and jamming features but don't know!
Yes I would love to see that comparison
I have the yamaha thr10x and the spark. The spark has a lot more options but imo the yamaha sounds much better. It sounds livelier and more airy than the spark. I bought the spark thinking it would replace the yamaha , nope I'm still playing my yamaha!
@@dragnasty540 thanks for the post. That is helpful. I'd still like to see a feature for feature comparison video done though. And @Darrell braun guitar if you're listening I'd like to have the sound from the actual speakers not through the USB to computer since that is the way most of us will be using it.
I had both, along with many other desktop amps, and the Yamaha is significantly better than the Spark. The Spark has a lot of killer features like tonecloud, limitless pedals and a great app. However, the chord finder and backing drummer is not good enough to be useable, and those were the features apart from the various tones that set it apart. The sound is very bass heavy, with a boxy muffled sound on almost every tone. There is also a grounding issue on them that causes hum. Dimension size it is also much bigger and heavier than the THR10. You would be pretty happy with it if you have not listened to other desktop amps. The THR10 has a boxy sound only on a few tones, the rest of them are very spatial and clear. It is pretty easy to use with lots of tones, enough to get whichever tone you want dialed in, despite not having as many as the Spark. The THR overall wins and would recommend over the Spark. However, if you factor in other amps like the Nux Mighty Plug and Mighty Air, you may want to pick those. They have very nice signal processing and spatial sound. My most used is still the THR.
Everyone forgets about Yamaha so this is interesting! I like it🤘🏼
Thanks for the review I requested.
But actually I got thr30ii before this review come out. And I'm very satisfied for this desktop amp 😉😁
On the aesthetics of these, I really loved the grille on the first ones and the darker colors.
Thee best table top guitar amplifier has certainly got to be the Vox Pathfinder 10, 10 watts, 6" diameter British Bulldog speaker, beautiful design and quality build/workmanship. It sounds fantastic and can play loud. It has a button for a high gain channel. The sound is the best among almost all my amps with the Fender '59 Bassman LTD and Vox AC15C1 sounding better. It sells everyday for $89 and is also on sale for $79 twice a year everywhere. The best part is the tone. If you play by feel and mood then the Vox Pathfinder 10 shall be a real inspirational amp for you. The fact that it's smaller and lighter and much less expensive than the offering here is just icing on the cake.
Great review! Solid amp for the money and very versatile. Thank you!
I’ve owned a lot of small solid state amps. I’ve had the new Yamaha THR10ii for a year now. It stands out above the rest.
I have the THR10X and I REALLY want them to release a THR30II with the same amps as my THR10X
I thought the special setting was to mimic the x
Yeah, the II series is basically all 3 of the gen 1 THRs.
I have this amp and it is amazing. I returned my spark amp and then bought this. The Spark has impressive sounds, but I just find this one to be better. Today (oct 28 2020) they launched a firmware update that changes de way sound is output through the speakers that made the amp even better.
Seeing how this is battery/rechargeable, makes me wish I would have gotten this vs the spark.
@@rebelcat420 I definitely recommend it. The Spark is so hot right now that it’d probably be an easy sale. Just consider that this amp is worth 500 bucks, about double the spark.
How do we upgrade it? Just got the this amp for 3 weeks.
@@abd-ix5qd you need to do it vía usb with your laptop . You need to download the latest the remote app, and once you have it connected, click the settings icon and you’ll se an option to update it.
I have a THR10C.😉
8:17 Thats what I was waiting for
I have had one for about 7 months. Using on commercial breaks of Chiefs game. Very fun to play with all the sounds and different cabs in the app. The tuner does not always work on the high E. Only complaint. Use it as a Bluetooth speaker on the patio when not playing guitar.
I have the older thr10. Absolutely love the hall stereo sound & portability. Even use pedals with it. Acoustic or electric, it’s my most used amp. May have to retire it in favor the newer, “bigger” model.
Bought mine a few months ago and love it. Not used anything else at home since I picked mine up.. 👍🇦🇺
Seems like an awesome solution for those of us who can't afford a Kemper or a Helix.
Or in my case a portable living room/back porch amp for those times I don’t want to be tied to my computer desk where my AxeFXIII lives.
Thanks for this. I have the THR5 and was looking to upgrade, thought about the THR10II but maybe I ought to just go big or go home. I like that all the amp settings are onboard (on the 10II you access most via the app). I'm not an app guy, I wanna plug and play, so that's appealing. Thanks for this look and demo!
To me this is not just "an amp", but combined with the line 6 g10 it's EVERYTHING BUT my guitar, as a beginner... I literally don't even own a guitar cable yet! Still I can do pretty much EVERYTHING that comes to mind! 😲😲 Literally the only thing I could think of: Can I play Rocksmith like that? Via the PC out? Or will I need the specific cable? - But besides that, I can't come up with a single location, style of music, practicing regime or even playing position logistically, that I couldn't cover between 1 guitar and this thing bought as combo with g10... Crazy!
I have one. I haven’t used my Marshall stack Jvm410h and helix in 6 months. Says it all
Review it against the Positive Grid Amp/ Monoprice Tube Amp/ Boss Katana 50....
I would like to see if he likes it better than the Spark
Vox Audio Air GT
I have tried it and it stands together with the Boss Katana. And both are better than the Positive Grid and waaay better than VOX air.
@@konstantingeorgiev7521 I have a Katana 50. Thinking of getting the Yamaha too. Would it be worth it ?
I've had the THR 10c for a while. Initially didn't bond with it, but now love it and found that you can really sculpt the sound you want with the controls. It's a delicious sound without the need to be loud and therefore will save your ears in later life. I've seen repeatedly that people say the Spark is too bassy and the sound quality isn't as good as the THR.
When you plug this into the computer you can change the settings there too.
I think it is time to get a footswitch for these desktop amps. Great video. Spark vs thr30ll comparison would be great
There are several available now in late 2021.
I still have and love my little Yamaha THR5
Cool video. I recall the first edition but never played thru one.
Did buy a Spark and learning my way. Lots of mileage from the crunch channel. No phone but inspiring for the classic hard rock (LS, UFO, TL, etc ) i love.
I do like the graphic around the effect and delay knobs on the Yamaha. Sorta reminds me of my first gen MicroCube.
Spark i guess does the same thing.
Any recommendations for a no-frills desktop amp with a bright clean channel? Don’t need any built-in effects or gain/drive effects, just need a small 10-30W amp
When i first saw THR30 i thought that I found the best amp for my schedule. Unfortunately, there's a few flaws that rarely pop-up in mind/reviews. Only now I got that my point of view was the thing that converted situational flaw to a big no-no. So lets check the red flags.
Little background: I do play a lot in my apartment, but most of the time I take guitar to jam with my friends, busk on a street or play on a small gig. So the most important thing is pair of sound quality and power independence.
First of all: This is a desktop amp for home and small gigs usage. Audio interface is really neat, but not a must have feature for me, personally. My biggest concern was li-ion battery. According to manufacturer info - it holds for 4-5 hours. But li-ion batteries tend to wear with time, for example like on smartphones after year and a half most smartphones start to charge slower and use power much faster. The thing is that it's a custom battery that would be a real pain in the ass to replace. For example old fashion roland micro cube uses AA batteries, where you can use rechargeable ones, and hold down in your pocket additional one or two replacement packs. You basically cant run out of battery power when you thought ahead of yourself. On THR you rely on a constant recharge if you spend most of your time outside.
Second problem is the smartphone connection. There's a lot of built in features that you cant control from the amp itself. Effect types, cabinet simulation, wave forms and other stuff. You can setup your presets at home, but you're limited to 5 slots, and they clearly had enough room on amp to remove smartphone dependancy, but with some intent they didn't. Unexpected thing is that in a few years Yamaha may cancel support of an app for older/newer smartphones, and you'll be forced to buy a new product, or take another phone which is compatible with old app, just to tweak your sound as you like. For example I got my audio interface from my older brother, because with firmware update MAudio canceled their support for profire interface on newest OS at the time, so that became unusable with Mac (*Happy win 7 user screeching*).
That's mostly not a really big problem. Imo, amp is great, but I looked at that with different angle. For street or open air gigs old roland cubes or maybe a Boss Katana would be a better solution.
@Alex Hays That's a piece of gear that suppose to serve your needs. When I saw THR - I thought that this is the best solution for street gigs. Something like an updated street cube. But then I did my research and find out cons that i've talk about previously.
Theres a lot of people which cannot afford bying new gear every now and then, and such detailed and subjective info is not often found around.
So basically you're whining for stuff that is the same on every damn digital device on the market, and don't even get it right because there's also a pc app you can use.
Using the app you are not limited to the 5 memory slots on the amp itself. You can store unlimited presets on your smartphone and load them through the app.
Yamaha never in tented the thr series to be a busking amp, on the contrary they very clearly advertised it as a desktop practice amp. If you go busking, Roland is your toy man, not this
Saved you a watch. Yes it's perfect. I own one and it gives me the dynamics of playing loud while my family sleeps. I use it daily multiple hours. Yamaha is insane. Also watch it cos dbg is sick
Is the battery replaceable or after 500 charge cycles do you gotta buy new one or would eletric take over after battery dead?
this is a good question... any one knows the answer?
After 500 charge cycles something better would have come out and you’d want to replace it.
Those effects knob look a lot like line 6 which I love line 6 and since Yamaha bought line 6 in 2014 why not. Will have to get me one of these. Love the tones he played.