Roland Cube Street EX (Black) Battery-Powered Stereo Amplifier
The Roland Cube Street EX (Black) is a portable and compact battery-powered stereo amplifier and is an absolute bestseller among street musicians. The Cube Street EX has been upgraded with more power, more channels and more versatility.
The 50W stereo amplifier has a 2-way playback system (with separate bass and treble speakers) which ensures a clear, crisp sound for larger audiences. 4x independent channels provide sufficient connectivity for a variety of microphones and instruments. Equalizers and effects help to precisely control the sound. Great guitar sounds are guaranteed with the integrated COSM amp models.
The main features of the Roland Cube Street EX (Black) include:
50W Battery-Powered Stereo Amplifier
Separate Mic/Instrument & Mic/Guitar Input Channels
Speakers: 2x 200mm Woofers, 2x 50mm Tweeters
3-Band EQ
Chorus/Delay & Reverb Effects
6x Amplifier Options
Eco/Normal/Max Output Power Modes
8x AA LR6, 8x Ni-MH Rechargeable Battery or 13V AC Adaptor Powered
i thing it is the best combo on batteries (used before korg MMA 130, Crate Tx15, listened to other roland products)
i succesfully used it with keyboard, violn, acoustic and electric guitars - all sounds nice.
batteries goes off quite fast, but i think it is beacause of bad quality accumulators
when you play at modes normal and max - then the bass sound is quite good too, but batteries work not for long time, in eco mode (or when batteries a re low) - when you play bass, then other instruments sounds at low volume - bass takes all power ...
Arrived in a week or so, very simple to unpack and operate. Amazing sound from the two big speakers etc and blasting it out for more than 3 hours from a set of rechargeable batteries is just plain amazing. With wireless connections to guitar and mic life is oh so simple too. Will recommend to anyone who asks.
Our little ukulele band owns two Roland Cube Street Exes. They are fairly light, so I can lug one every week to band practice, and plug in two mics and two ukes. Set up together, they form a good PA for smallish events. Because they can be driven by batteries ( you need loads of rechargeables), you can busk with them or use them in the open air. In bigger gigs we use them as monitor speakers. They are so versatile. They produce a fair amount of noise and have decent effects. Easy to store. Honestly, there's nothing not to like.