I am an intermediate guitarist, learning and playing guitar for fan, mostly on my own at home, but also sometimes with friends.
This is my first Tube amp and I love it, but is it the right amp for me or you?
I also own a solid state Roland Cube 30, which I have used for about 7 years and have been fairly satisfied with.
As I progressed with my guitar playing, I became curious about tube amps and wanted to buy one.
In my family we have 6 guitars. 4 of them are Harley Benton. I like the guitars, I think that they are good, for me anyway. What is important for me, I trust the HB brand.
So when HB Tube 15 appeared at Thomman, the reviews were quite good, the price was attractive, and I decided to go for it and try a tube amp.
Good:
I ordered it and received it very quickly, as always.
It looks nice and it looks reasonably sturdy.
It sounds really good.
I love the way it sounds.
Comparing to my old amp, HB Tube amp's sound is much nicer, much richer and more detailed to my ear. It is difficult to put the finger on it and explain the difference. But I've found that I just enjoy playing guitar through my new amp more than the solid state one.
Maybe not so good:
On the other hand there are features (or lack of them) that make me wonder if it is the best amp for me.
-One Channel: The amp has only one channel, so if you don't use tone pedals you have to bend down and turn the dials in order to switch to a different set of tones. Which is not a big problem for my home playing.
But if you want to switch between e.g. "clean" and "overdriven" quickly during a song, you will probably need to buy tone pedals and spend more money. Again, not a big problem if that is the cost and direction of travel you are aware of and want to pursue.
- if you want to use a backup track and play along through the same amp, again you will need to buy some sort of pedal or gadget that enables you to do that. I am currently using a looper pedal. Again, that is more money to spend.
- some modern solid state amps offer good sound and versatility. Like selection of tones that emulate reasonably well different tube amps. (i.e. wider selection of tones than just one amp).
- is it loud enough for use at gigs? I don't know. But it sure is more than loud enough for any house or shed.
Conclusion:
I decided to keep it because I liked the sound it makes so much that I will be prepared to spend some more money to get even more fun from it.
On the other hand, if I was a beginner or if I was on a very limited budget and could afford only one single amp, I would make a different choice.
I would buy a versatile solid state amp instead of this one.
Or any other tube amp.