rocknroll9225
Well-known member
Before you all berate me because this has already been discussed to death... I'm sorry. And I'm also sorry about how long this post is. But I'm sitting on the fence about this and I need some nudging, no matter which side I fall on.
Lately, I've been considering downgrading from my Mark V to a Mark IV. Well, at least in my rig. I have close to a grand saved up so selling the Mark V wouldn't be necessary to fund it.
My reasons:
- I hear that the general consensus is that the Mark IV's lead channel sounds better than the Mark V's Mark IV mode (or at the very least, they don't sound exactly alike, since "better" is subjective). The Mark IV is supposedly more raw whereas the V is more refined, and going off of the clips I've heard I would agree with that. The lead channel is the most important one to me personally, so I'm not so sure I want to sacrifice it for the much better 1st and 2nd channels in the V - especially since I have the Axe-Fx II which can quite capably handle the cleans and crunch sounds. If I were to switch to the IV, I would use it as a 1 channel amp (on the lead mode) and just use the axe for the rest.
- Not that it should really matter what they're labeled, but the Mark V doesn't really have it's own voice or personality. The lead modes have always been the defining characteristic of Boogies and the Mark V only has less-than-100%-faithful recreations of the previous models instead of it's own "Mark V" lead mode. As long as I'm using the amp for one main sound, why not have the real thing rather than one based on the real thing that sacrifices tone for features that I don't need or use?
- I love all of the features of the Mark V, but realistically I only ever use the fat, crunch, and Mark IV modes on the V. I'll occasionally use Mark I, Extreme, or IIC+ if I'm in the mood but I can't use them live. I can replace the V's preamp versatility with the Axe-Fx, and that leaves only the better reverb, preset EQ option, solo boost and multi-watt switches as features that the V has over the IV (for me). I don't even use the reverb in the context of my rig because of the axe-fx, and I honestly never use the preset EQ. If I were to get a Mark IV, I'd have it modded to use the reverb knob in the back as a solo boost knob since I wouldn't be using the reverb anyway. And the multi-watt switches are nice, but they aren't enough to keep me on the V's side if the IV's tone is better. And the IV does have the Class A switch, too.
- The Mark IV can fit in a standard rack. I'm almost done with building my rig, and the rack itself is one of the last things I still have to get. It'd be much easier to be able to order a standard rack instead of a custom one built specifically for the head.
I love all of the V's bells and whistles, but so many of them, in the context of my rig, are just unnecessary (minus the solo boost, that's pretty necessary).I will truly miss the Mark V's clean channel, as it's my favorite clean I've ever heard. BUT - I just might be able to use it even if I switch to the IV.
Fractal is about to release this new "tone matching" feature in the next axe-fx update. It basically sends a series of sweeps through an amp, and compares the amp's output with the original signal to create a profile of an amp, much like the Kemper Profiling Amp does. They've already put up a few clips demonstrating the feature and I honestly couldn't hear much of a difference, and I like to think I have relatively trained ears. It can copy the frequency spectrum from 50 Hz to 18K within 1 dB. :shock: SO, I could just "profile" the Mark V's fat mode (and maybe crunch, too) and use it through the IV's power amp.
-DISCLAIMER-
I know you're not supposed to judge an amp off of a studio mix, but for the sake of making my point, it's either this or youtube videos taken with camera phones.
Not that I want to sound exactly like John Petrucci (because I don't) but take for example The Dark Eternal Night (recorded with the Mark IV) and On the Backs of Angels (recorded with the Mark V). Honestly the V just sounds castrated in comparison IMO.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkF4JD2rO3Q listen to 7:32
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oasnbzEMV08 listen to 1:54
See what I mean? I know a lot of production went into those sounds, but still... that's quite a coincidence. His tone sounds amazing in A Nightmare to Remember also, and that was on the Mark IV, too (well, the rhythm tones were).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADX9DdURn8o listen to 1:42
If you made it through all of that, thanks for sticking with me. Does this sound like a good idea to any of you?
Lately, I've been considering downgrading from my Mark V to a Mark IV. Well, at least in my rig. I have close to a grand saved up so selling the Mark V wouldn't be necessary to fund it.
My reasons:
- I hear that the general consensus is that the Mark IV's lead channel sounds better than the Mark V's Mark IV mode (or at the very least, they don't sound exactly alike, since "better" is subjective). The Mark IV is supposedly more raw whereas the V is more refined, and going off of the clips I've heard I would agree with that. The lead channel is the most important one to me personally, so I'm not so sure I want to sacrifice it for the much better 1st and 2nd channels in the V - especially since I have the Axe-Fx II which can quite capably handle the cleans and crunch sounds. If I were to switch to the IV, I would use it as a 1 channel amp (on the lead mode) and just use the axe for the rest.
- Not that it should really matter what they're labeled, but the Mark V doesn't really have it's own voice or personality. The lead modes have always been the defining characteristic of Boogies and the Mark V only has less-than-100%-faithful recreations of the previous models instead of it's own "Mark V" lead mode. As long as I'm using the amp for one main sound, why not have the real thing rather than one based on the real thing that sacrifices tone for features that I don't need or use?
- I love all of the features of the Mark V, but realistically I only ever use the fat, crunch, and Mark IV modes on the V. I'll occasionally use Mark I, Extreme, or IIC+ if I'm in the mood but I can't use them live. I can replace the V's preamp versatility with the Axe-Fx, and that leaves only the better reverb, preset EQ option, solo boost and multi-watt switches as features that the V has over the IV (for me). I don't even use the reverb in the context of my rig because of the axe-fx, and I honestly never use the preset EQ. If I were to get a Mark IV, I'd have it modded to use the reverb knob in the back as a solo boost knob since I wouldn't be using the reverb anyway. And the multi-watt switches are nice, but they aren't enough to keep me on the V's side if the IV's tone is better. And the IV does have the Class A switch, too.
- The Mark IV can fit in a standard rack. I'm almost done with building my rig, and the rack itself is one of the last things I still have to get. It'd be much easier to be able to order a standard rack instead of a custom one built specifically for the head.
I love all of the V's bells and whistles, but so many of them, in the context of my rig, are just unnecessary (minus the solo boost, that's pretty necessary).I will truly miss the Mark V's clean channel, as it's my favorite clean I've ever heard. BUT - I just might be able to use it even if I switch to the IV.
Fractal is about to release this new "tone matching" feature in the next axe-fx update. It basically sends a series of sweeps through an amp, and compares the amp's output with the original signal to create a profile of an amp, much like the Kemper Profiling Amp does. They've already put up a few clips demonstrating the feature and I honestly couldn't hear much of a difference, and I like to think I have relatively trained ears. It can copy the frequency spectrum from 50 Hz to 18K within 1 dB. :shock: SO, I could just "profile" the Mark V's fat mode (and maybe crunch, too) and use it through the IV's power amp.
-DISCLAIMER-
I know you're not supposed to judge an amp off of a studio mix, but for the sake of making my point, it's either this or youtube videos taken with camera phones.
Not that I want to sound exactly like John Petrucci (because I don't) but take for example The Dark Eternal Night (recorded with the Mark IV) and On the Backs of Angels (recorded with the Mark V). Honestly the V just sounds castrated in comparison IMO.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkF4JD2rO3Q listen to 7:32
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oasnbzEMV08 listen to 1:54
See what I mean? I know a lot of production went into those sounds, but still... that's quite a coincidence. His tone sounds amazing in A Nightmare to Remember also, and that was on the Mark IV, too (well, the rhythm tones were).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADX9DdURn8o listen to 1:42
If you made it through all of that, thanks for sticking with me. Does this sound like a good idea to any of you?