Well, it was. I turned it off and back on and now it's fine. I turned the gain down to about 2 and it was still distorted. The thing is, I'm not entirely sure it was the amp - I just bought a lightly used C-7 Hellraiser with active EMG pickups, and I'm not sure if a dying battery can cause that kind of sound. Anyone have any experience with that? I doubt the battery is dead after only two months, it looks barely played too so it can't have that much playing time on it.
The more likely explanation is that it really was the amp's fault. What exactly happened? And why did it go away when I turned the amp off and back on?
It's a very old head, early 90's and I just had it fixed because a redplated power tube blew a fuse.
edit: And while I'm here I might as well ask about getting a good sound. Every clip I hear has either an amazing rhythm tone, or amazing lead tone, but I can't seem to dial something like that in. I've looked at the settings posted here countless times, and currently have it set like this:
Lead channel
Treble - 7
Mid - 4.5 - 5.5
Bass - 2-3.5
Presence - 2 pulled
Gain - 8 pulled
Drive - 7 pushed
Harmonics, Class A, Triode, Tweed power
Running through a Mesa 3/4 back 1x12 with 4 new 6L6's and 12Ax7's from JJ tubes. My guitar is either an Ibanez RG with Dimarzios or Schecter C-7 Hellraiser with 7-string EMG85's.
I just can't get that smooth lead tone, it's always kind of harsh and rhythm is "flubby" and not very heavy even with the bridge EMG85 and gain settings as above. It stays flubby even with bass at 0. Do you guys think it's the cabinet? I can't help but think that closed back would work better. But I also have a suspicion that something is up with the amp - is it possible for two Boogies of the same model to sound different?
Sorry for the long post, it's been frustrating me for a while though. So much in fact that I've been considering trying to sell my mark IV and get a newer one, but I have more to try first. I'm just surprised that my settings here can't make sounds like I hear in videos and clips, with similar guitars.
The more likely explanation is that it really was the amp's fault. What exactly happened? And why did it go away when I turned the amp off and back on?
It's a very old head, early 90's and I just had it fixed because a redplated power tube blew a fuse.
edit: And while I'm here I might as well ask about getting a good sound. Every clip I hear has either an amazing rhythm tone, or amazing lead tone, but I can't seem to dial something like that in. I've looked at the settings posted here countless times, and currently have it set like this:
Lead channel
Treble - 7
Mid - 4.5 - 5.5
Bass - 2-3.5
Presence - 2 pulled
Gain - 8 pulled
Drive - 7 pushed
Harmonics, Class A, Triode, Tweed power
Running through a Mesa 3/4 back 1x12 with 4 new 6L6's and 12Ax7's from JJ tubes. My guitar is either an Ibanez RG with Dimarzios or Schecter C-7 Hellraiser with 7-string EMG85's.
I just can't get that smooth lead tone, it's always kind of harsh and rhythm is "flubby" and not very heavy even with the bridge EMG85 and gain settings as above. It stays flubby even with bass at 0. Do you guys think it's the cabinet? I can't help but think that closed back would work better. But I also have a suspicion that something is up with the amp - is it possible for two Boogies of the same model to sound different?
Sorry for the long post, it's been frustrating me for a while though. So much in fact that I've been considering trying to sell my mark IV and get a newer one, but I have more to try first. I'm just surprised that my settings here can't make sounds like I hear in videos and clips, with similar guitars.