pedalboard amp

As young players go all in on digital amplification, Rhett and Zach make the case for old-school air-movers.

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A dual-amp powerhouse with a plethora of features.

Great size-to-feature ratio. Plenty of tonal options.

Missing a spring reverb emulation. Tube emulations can be subtle.

$459

DSM & Humboldt Simplifier DLX
simplifieramp.com

4
4.5
3.5
3.5

Pedalboard amps seem to be all the rage lately. And I have to admit that I've become increasingly more amicable to getting big tones with less gear. The DSM & Humboldt Simplifier DLX, which delivers a lot of big tones in a single suited-for-pedalboard sized stomp, is the latest iteration of the company's "zero-watt" amp series and features plenty of bells and whistles for the stereo set.

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Heavy amp hardware in a petite package.

Dirty channel sounds amazing. Portable and light.

Clean channel isn't particularly loud on a 16-ohm cabinet.

$399

Hughes & Kettner AmpMan Modern
hughes-and-kettner.com

4
4.5
4.5
4

Hughes & Kettner are good at anticipating trends. The 1991-introduced Tubeman, a pedal-sized preamp, offered full-spectrum DI sounds years before the modeling craze. Released two years before that, the Red Box was among the first cabinet simulators. Decades later, Hughes & Kettner is still tweaking those formulas to make amps a simpler, more flexible proposition. Their new AmpMan is a Red Box-equipped, all-analog, 2-channel, preamp and class D power amp—all packed into a compact, 2.5 pound, pedal-sized unit. And it's one of the most potent distillations of the H&K amp-slimming formula yet. The AmpMan is offered in two models: Classic and Modern. But for this review we took a turn with the higher-gain Modern version.

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