The THR Editor is a software application that lets you freely edit settings and create patch files on a computer screen for Yamaha’s THR10, THR5, THR10C, THR10X or THR5A Guitar Amplifier. In addition to the main controls on the THR, it provides settings for the compressor, noise gate, and. Bossa nova music on youtube. Free download font thai psp2.
Yamaha Thr10x Software
[DISCUSSION] Yamaha Thr10 Presets
I just recently bought a Yamaha Thr10 amp and I love it. It has a great sound and gets plenty loud for bedroom practice. However, I am fairly new to guitar (learning on my own now for about 6 months) and am really new to amps and their settings. I love how you can download the Thr10 editor from Yamahas website and customize, download, and save presets to the amp. Since I haven't had much experience with an amp, it's hard for me to get some different cool tones that I'd like. I have already looked at guitarpatches website and found some tones I liked, but wanted to ask Reddit! I noticed the Yamaha Thr10 is a very popular amp on here, so was hoping everyone would post a download link to their favorite amp settings, or share a screenshot of the amp settings you like from the editor!
Yamaha Thr10 Blues
Modulation with any of the gain models sounded horrid (like a turd covered in shoe polish). Also, the multi-FX and delay/reverb are on continuous knobs, and just as you are getting close to a useable sound, the effects change to something totally different. Very difficult to lock into a good combination of reverb/delay and or chorus/flange/trem….
Surprising limited clean headroom through the clean channel. EQ knobs are strange and don't work like an ordinary tone stack. Having all three EQ knobs turned down results in zero volume output. The impact of the EQ was really extreme and it was very difficult to dial in a usable tone. I had to back the treble and mids way down to compensate for the small drivers and it was still only effective to a point.
All the gain models sucked, although surprisingly I liked the modern voicing the best, with varying levels of gain applied. Crunch and lead voicings were totally uninspiring. Brit Hi was second best after modern, but really, all the gain models had a phony fizz that made them sound smallish.
Can you practice through this thing? Yeah.. I guess. But it's really not much fun. I think there's no getting around the lack of a decent sized driver. I question the taste of anyone who recommends one of these. And by the way.. they're not really that cheap.. $300 for a 10W solid state amp. Much better options elsewhere. As a 30+ year player, I highly recommend you look elsewhere. (FWIW, I normally play Bogner Shiva, hand-wired Plexi, and a Fender Tremolux… I do know good tone).