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Sonuus G2M guitar to midi converter. I have one of these to play with for a couple of days, I'm sure it's of interest to quite a few list members. 1) Essentially, it tracks very well indeed. If anything it feels better than the Axon/G50. 2) You do have to play clean, they suggest palm muting at the bridge, which does work well. Don't expect miracles in terms of shredding. 3) Pitch Bend is fixed at 2 semitones. If you try a 2 semitone bend it often retriggers. Bends of one semitone are perfect. So no glissando for Rick. A trill on a semitone doesn't retrigger the synth, but on a tone it does. 4) No controls whatsover, just a 2 position gain switch(which worked ok for me), and a suggestion to use your guitar volume pot. 5)There's a thru output for the guitar signal, didn't test quality but will if anyone asks. 6) No warbling! At least, no warbling on sustained tones. I know exactly which note on my guitar gives the problems to all other devices, and the G2M plays that note with a long sustain till it shuts off. Of course, if you have more than one note ringing at once, by design or haphazardness, then it warbles away. 7) I couldn't trick it into playing ultra low notes by playing just the right chord :-( 8) Range is exactly that of the guitar. Lowest note it will track is low drop D. Highest note is the 24th fret top E. Outside that range....nothing. 9) The power LED doubles as a guitar tuner. Pretty hopeless, the flashing speed decreases as you get nearer the note. It's ok for checking tuning, but as there's no info as to whether you're sharp or flat it's very difficult to use. For the cost of one extra LED it would have been workable. 10) Neat "battery dying" LED. Tells you in advance the battery will die, so you can replace it before gig or recording, (didn't test). 11) Not programmable in any way, fixed midi channel, velocity response, pitch bend rage, no transpose. Overall, I thought this was a pretty neat little device, I didn't check for sure against the Axon/G50 devices, but I reckon the latency is as low as with a hex p/u. If you wanna play rhythmically accurate, use the high notes and transpose if needed. Being mono is something of a disadvantage, as not only chords are ruled out, but also arpeggio type playing. Any questions....I have to pass it on to the owner soon. andy butler ps I also have an RC50 here, so expect some comments on that. It's certainly *not* plug and play :-)