ZT Amplifiers Lunchbox 2
Friday, July 10, 2009 at 12:34AM
Just the facts:
This amp is small... but big. By that I mean it is freakin loud like you wouldn't believe. The little 5 inch speaker is tough and you can crank this baby up loud enough to play with a drummer. That said, I wouldn't recommend that unless you use an extension speaker, which the Lunchbox accommodates easily with an extension speaker jack. It is a solid state amp but the designers were mindful of what guitarist want and need in an amp and you can adjust the gain staging to suit almost any situation. I myself won't go anywhere without a good clean boost pedal and an over the top distortion pedal and this is true even when using my Mesa Boogie MKIV (which has three channels of glorious tube overdrive available). I'm just saying, if your a tone freak don't write this off just because its a solid state amp.
The benefits of portability and power far out weigh the negatives. Sometimes I want to evaluate what the pickups of a certain guitar sound like un adulterated. For that I've been relying on the Lunchbox straight up with no pedals. It's so convenient and simple to use with only four knobs I can easily set up baseline settings for doing comparisons with great tone and no fuss. I can move this amp around with ease and you might be surprised what having that kind of mobility does for you. Just pick it up and go. Plug it in where and when you want to play. It's actually very liberating.
Like I said earlier, it has an extension speaker out which I use with a single vintage alnico 12 inch speaker in an open back cab if I want to move some air. That combined with the closed back sound of the lunchbox and you have a really potent and loud tone generating machine. If you want to hear just the extension speaker by itself the Lunchbox has a switch to disable its internal speaker.
The lunch box has a reverb control that is not quite what you would expect. It's purpose is to adjust between a closed back cabinet sound and an open back cabinet sound. It takes a little getting use to but it is a usable control if a little subtle. Just don't go expecting lush reverb from it and you'll be alright. The tone control is also remarkably usable which is rare for a single tone control circuit. the tone control on the lunchbox seems operate interactively with the gain staging setting which is basically how you have the volume and gain settings adjusted relative to each other. If you have the gain staging set up fairly clean you can still get clear highs out of it even with the tone control set low. This is something to keep in mind when setting up the amp.