Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Guitar World
Guitar World
Entertainment
Phil Weller

“Finely tuned to replicate the rich and warm tones of a tube amp”: Ashdown is so convinced its new budget amp range offers killer tone, it’s literally called it Killer Tone

Ashdown KT combo amps.

Ashdown has unveiled Killer Tone, a new range of affordable combo amps featuring pure analog signal paths and a suite of built-in digital effects.

Made up of two 15-watt builds – with one sans effects for a lower price point – and a 30-watt model, the amps have been “finely tuned to replicate the rich and warm tones of a tube amp,” with the designs catering to aspiring and well-versed guitarists in equal measure.

All three KT combo amps offer discreet electronics for zero latency playing and “enhanced dynamics” and pack two channels each – clean and overdrive. Enough gain has been weaved into the latter channel to push the amps “well beyond classic crunch tones,” and designed to be further pushed by a player’s choice of overdrive or boost pedal if needed.

Each channel has a dedicated dial for sweet spot finding, alongside a three-band EQ that operates for both channels.

Their connectivity is also bolstered by a line input for connecting an external device. The lack of a DI output does feel like a bit of a missed opportunity, but there is at least a headphone socket for shredding after curfew.

The KT-15 and KT-15 FX both offer an 8” speaker, with the latter furthered with 16 effects, while the 30-watt KT-30’s speaker is 10”, with that same 16-strong effects suite on hand.

Of that effect collection, there are six reverbs (Ambience, Room, Plate, Spring, Hall, and Cathedral) and three delays. A quartet of modulation effects is also built-in, consisting of Chorus, Phaser, Flanger, and Tremolo.

That all accounts for a fairly standard array of tone-altering options, but what is an atypical addition for a budget amp like this is its trio of combinations, which means its Chorus, Delay, and Phaser effects can benefit from the widening scope of a Reverb.

The effects are selected with a dial, and their intensity can be altered by a sister control.

“The Killer Tone series offers a range of options to suit different preferences, ensuring that every guitarist can find the perfect match for their playing style,” says Ashdown.

(Image credit: Ashdown)
(Image credit: Ashdown)
(Image credit: Ashdown)

With prices starting at $133, Ashdown's new combos join a growing entry-level and practice amp market that Blackstar has been trying to gain a stranglehold of with the release of its ID:Core V4 amps, and the Debut 50R – which was recently treated a 100-watt version, too.

Alongside them, Positive Grid is continuing to revolutionize the digital amp world with the AI-bolstered Spark 2 – which has a fan in Steve Vai – and Boss is proving a key player with the newly revamped Katana amps.

The long-standing British amp builders have hinted that more releases are on the horizon, making for a busy end to the year. Earlier this year, it dropped a “groundbreaking innovation” with its OriginAL-EVO-C112T bass amp.

The KT-15 is priced at $134, with the K5-15 FX and KT-30 FX rising to $248 and $278 respectively.

Head to Ashdown to learn more.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.