id say give it some time to do a lot of tweaking before you just give up on it. but then again it might just not fit you very well. i always thought it was weird how one person can think an amp is a godsend, and another equally as intelligible person can think its crap. i.e., i think companies like engl and diezel are really good, theyre just not for me. i have friends that love engl and are like "you should have gotten an engl, theyre the best". meh. different strokes for different folks.
ive only had my mark v for a few weeks, but ive never loved a piece of gear as much as ive loved the V. once i found my favorite settings, it sounded just about as close to my dream tone as i think i could possibly get. and i strongly disagree about the jack of all trades comment. granted there are a lot of multi-channel amps that are built for one specific purpose, and have 1 or 2 extra channels thrown in for good measure (Peavey 5150, Bogner Uberschall, to name a couple), i think the mark v is more like 3 one-channel amps in one box. for instance, if i was playing like a blues gig or something, i could just set the amp to ch 1, tweed mode, EQ off, settings to taste, 45 W tube rectifier (or 10W), variac power, and just sit there chicken pickin away, and (for me, at least) it would work just as well as a fender. thats just one example tho. i most often play hard rock/metal tho, so i really like the versatility of having an amazing, fat chimy clean, a really nice crunch and face-ripping high gain all on tap. and no one said that boogie was trying to make the crunch mode sound like a marshall. they made it to sound like a boogie crunch mode. if you want a marshall then get a marshall. i personally havent found a sound i didnt like out of this amp yet; just ones i didnt love quite as much as the others :mrgreen: .