I have a Mark V 40th Anniversary wide-body Combo. I also have a Mark IV, and a Mark IIC+, all bought new with EVM-12L speakers.
They are all great amps. I have primarily used the Mark IIC+, and the Mark IV, but more recently the Mark V. It is a wonderful
amplifier, and very flexible. I can get many great sounds, and when using it in a Wet / Dry setup it is wonderful with a Black Face
twin as the other amp.
However...this amp has a serious design flaw. I have researched the channel switching noise issue in great detail. I also have significant education
in electronics and >30 years chip design experience. There is something wrong in this design with the switching, and I believe that
Mesa Engineering needs to come clean with the error and a plausible explanation. It's not acceptable for anyone to just say -
Just live with it - That's the way it is. This is a clear design error...
I took my amp into a great repair center. We suspected the JFETs in the Mute circuitry. The outcome was that the mute control circuit is functioning properly as are all the mute FETs. An external DC supply was hooked up to the mute buss so we could positively measure the JFETs without removing any and voiding the warranty - it was hard to tell for sure if they were turning on all the way with the brief mute pulse.
After trying to slow down that pulse a bit, one can actually ground the input to the power amp (where the last mute FET is), so the amp is effectively in permanent mute mode. Even this does not kill the loud pops experienced, meaning the noise is leaking in some other way, likely due to a PCB layout/power supply grounding flaw.
The switching is quite loud at first yet it quiets down considerably once you switch the channels 5-10 times, to the point at which it’s probably not noticeable when playing. Mesa Engineering Folks - We shouldn't have to do this for this amplifier. This is a serious design flaw - but it appears that the amp is 100% functional. If you had this in your PC do to a Microprocessor or motherboard chip design issue, and you had to reboot 5 times to get to a start-up screen, you would not deem that acceptable.
Mesa Boogie - Your explanation??? Lots of Mark V owners need to know the truth...I'm sure that your Engineers do...
They are all great amps. I have primarily used the Mark IIC+, and the Mark IV, but more recently the Mark V. It is a wonderful
amplifier, and very flexible. I can get many great sounds, and when using it in a Wet / Dry setup it is wonderful with a Black Face
twin as the other amp.
However...this amp has a serious design flaw. I have researched the channel switching noise issue in great detail. I also have significant education
in electronics and >30 years chip design experience. There is something wrong in this design with the switching, and I believe that
Mesa Engineering needs to come clean with the error and a plausible explanation. It's not acceptable for anyone to just say -
Just live with it - That's the way it is. This is a clear design error...
I took my amp into a great repair center. We suspected the JFETs in the Mute circuitry. The outcome was that the mute control circuit is functioning properly as are all the mute FETs. An external DC supply was hooked up to the mute buss so we could positively measure the JFETs without removing any and voiding the warranty - it was hard to tell for sure if they were turning on all the way with the brief mute pulse.
After trying to slow down that pulse a bit, one can actually ground the input to the power amp (where the last mute FET is), so the amp is effectively in permanent mute mode. Even this does not kill the loud pops experienced, meaning the noise is leaking in some other way, likely due to a PCB layout/power supply grounding flaw.
The switching is quite loud at first yet it quiets down considerably once you switch the channels 5-10 times, to the point at which it’s probably not noticeable when playing. Mesa Engineering Folks - We shouldn't have to do this for this amplifier. This is a serious design flaw - but it appears that the amp is 100% functional. If you had this in your PC do to a Microprocessor or motherboard chip design issue, and you had to reboot 5 times to get to a start-up screen, you would not deem that acceptable.
Mesa Boogie - Your explanation??? Lots of Mark V owners need to know the truth...I'm sure that your Engineers do...