18
by cakes
I've had several GK800RBs and they are my favorite bass amp. I've not spent a lot of time with the 400, but 200 watts is probably enough, depending on your cabinet and the music you're playing. I played my 800 in Fake Limbs with an Eminence Delta 15a in a wide, ported Emperor cabinet, and that was plenty. Its got an awesome growl when you push it (I also have hot wired p-bass pickups). I recall playing a 400rb through a smaller cab and not really liking it, but that was a very limited experience.
There's a GK800RB amp sim on Plugin Alliance that is spot on and relatively cheap. Sometimes you can pick it up for $29. GK also makes their own amp sim and IR cabinet modeler that looks great. I have yet to try it, since I have the GK800 from Plugin Alliance and plenty of cab sims, but I am curious to try it out. I don't remember all the amps that GK has in their suite, but I don't think the 400 was in there.
There's also a GK amp pedal that supposedly gets the 800 sound (and two other of their amps). It's a mixed bag all around, from what I've read. If there truly is a GK800 amp pedal that sounds like the real thing, I'm gonna be all over it.
I'm really amazed though that they've nearly tripled in price. I recall buying my last one online at Music Go Round for under $300, probably 9 or 10 years ago. Now, I'm seeing them sell above $800. I saw that GK had stopped making a lot of their solid state gear very recently. Their offerings are much slimmer, and I think there was an amp they had that could do the GK800 sound, but that was one of the discontinued models. I can't recall why they did this, my guess is that they're going more in the direction of class D and amp sims. Even still, the GK has been discontinued since 2012, though I thought it was discontinued in the 90s because I've only ever bought used ones.
As far as sound goes, the GK is one of the best solid state bass amps I've played .The 800 can sound beefy and clean, or growly and mid-rangy... it's pretty versatile. The closest thing that came to it was a Traynor Monoblock. I really love getting that sub low end with a fat, growly top end. It's just... chef's kiss. They take pedals well, I liked using a Klon and a Super Hardon to give it more punch when needed. The Super Hardon would really push up the full range, the amp almost felt like a bomb ready to explode, it was amazing. The Klon brightened up the top end. I'm sure a muff or some kind of hard clipper would also sound amazing.