clutch71
Well-known member
...after nearly 2 years of searching!
RH1 was very clean and easy to dial in. Nice lush reverb. Spent a little time just enjoying the chimmy-ness of this channel.
Rh2 - Wasn't real impressed but not bad "crunch" tones. I spent the less time here.
LD1 - Really enjoyed this channel. I was at GC and I'm not one to crank amps...but I did get into it a little. I was surprised at the volume jump between 2 and 3. 2 being bedroom level and 3 being stand back! I only had a 3 ft chord, thanks GC, so I really didn't want to go deaf. I'm sure 5 or 6 is pure sweetness.
I was real surprised how quickly I could dial in good tones after hearing so much talk about how hard they are to dial in. I have done a lot of research and knew to keep the bass low. But given time with one, I'd have it dialed and forgotten.
After all this time...It lives up to it's hype for me. I really enjoyed it but...the thing is killer loud. For around the house I still prefer my DSL50 and there were aspects of the Mark IV that reminded me of it. This is indeed one of the most versitile amps I've ever played. Any gigging musician would do well by one.
RH1 was very clean and easy to dial in. Nice lush reverb. Spent a little time just enjoying the chimmy-ness of this channel.
Rh2 - Wasn't real impressed but not bad "crunch" tones. I spent the less time here.
LD1 - Really enjoyed this channel. I was at GC and I'm not one to crank amps...but I did get into it a little. I was surprised at the volume jump between 2 and 3. 2 being bedroom level and 3 being stand back! I only had a 3 ft chord, thanks GC, so I really didn't want to go deaf. I'm sure 5 or 6 is pure sweetness.
I was real surprised how quickly I could dial in good tones after hearing so much talk about how hard they are to dial in. I have done a lot of research and knew to keep the bass low. But given time with one, I'd have it dialed and forgotten.
After all this time...It lives up to it's hype for me. I really enjoyed it but...the thing is killer loud. For around the house I still prefer my DSL50 and there were aspects of the Mark IV that reminded me of it. This is indeed one of the most versitile amps I've ever played. Any gigging musician would do well by one.