Here is some posts from a thread I did on another board.
I had a day off (thanks to the Blizzard of 05), so I made my way to the local GC to poke around. They had one of the new Boogie Lone Star Special 1X12s in, so I checked it out. I had a Lone Star 1X12 when they first came out, and I was impressed with the tones. I did have a reliability issue, but I've since come to suspect a power spike at the club I was playing. Anyway, I also had a Maverick a few years back, and thought it was also a pretty good amp. I only had about 45 minutes playing time on it, but I found it to be a cross between the Lone Star and a Maverick, plus some improvement. The clean channel is not quite as 3D as a Matchless, but at this price with this flexibility, that's okay. I found the amp to be a lot more airy than both the Lone Star and Maverick. It's definately not boxy like most Mesa's I've played. One interesting note, was that the amp comes stock with a 5Y3 rectifier tube! That just happens to be my favorite rectifier (because of it's increased compression), and one that I sub into all my amps that have a 5AR4 type rectifier tube. I only checked the amp out with both channels in the 30 watt setting, but both channels sounded great. I experimented with the 15 and 5 watt settings last night. As expected, as you go down in watts, you lose a little volume, a little headroon, and a little of the highs. Very useful, and nice to be able to choose independant settings for each channel. So far, I like the 30 watt settings on both channels best.
Originally posted by MikeyG
On the original Lonestar, the channel 2 was muddy unless you turned both the treble and presence VERY HIGH. How about on this model??
I'm curious to hear this amp, because the original was great except for the latter.
I agree, and they did address it. I have the Treble at the same level as the clean channel (about 11:00), and have the prescence just slightly higher on the gain channel (1:00) than the clean (11:00), and they have basically the same openess/tone. The drive control also helps control the muddiness. I have my drive set to about 9:30 and the gain set to 2:30.
I finally got a chance to play her at stage volume. This is one really sweet sounding amp. At stage volume, the class A chime comes out in spades. Channel one, with the gain at 12:00, sounds amazing. Single coils just barely broke up with hard strumming, hums had a nice crunch, but cleaned up with just light picking dynamics. Channel 2 is very full sounding, but not boxy at all. Sounded very close to a Bad Cat Hot Cat. I did get a chance to A/B it against my VHT Pittbull 45 1X12, and they were very close, with the LSS being a little sweeter, and a lot more versatile. The LSS had a sweeter more class A type midrange.