Interesting observation: Vertical 212 vs OS Recto 412
I am actually hearing more sag in the power supply with the vertical 212 than I did with the Recto 412. I will have to bring the 412 cab back into the family room to compare again. Not sure if it is related to master volume of the channel I am using. Most of the time I set the masters to about 11oclock or a bit lower. When the volume goes up it seems to tighten up. I also noticed at lower volumes there is more bass present in the mix. Sure, your volume dictates how it will drive the power tubes which also may relate to the notable sag with power chords. Bump up the volume and it seems to tighten up considerably as the amplitude of the mids and upper frequencies become more pronounced. Quite similar to the Roadster in some respects but I get sag at higher settings with that amp than the JP. What I really love about the JP is the palm muted characteristic, nice, dry, precise, and well defined. I struggled way too long with my other amps to get that characteristic. Of course the signing leads is the best part but I do more than just lead playing (really cannot play lead but I can pretend I do). The more I play through the JP, the more I love it.
I have tried to get that classic rock chime with low gain settings. Still no luck there. Thinking about getting a Flux Drive pedal or Throttle box so I can get the clean channel into clip. Still I have the Roadster or RA100 to use for that style. Notice I did not mention the Mark V.... I want that one out of the picture as it seems a bit week or sterile for my tastes. After playing with the JP for a while, even CH2 on the Mark V seems lame. CH3 does not even compare. Okay, sure you can get more gain from the Mark V CH3 if you boost the gain control as far as it can go, along with that is muddy notes even with bass dialed back. Sterile is all I can say to describe the V. I barely get compression just fizz. Mark IV if you dare to set the master past 4 would begin to compress the signal but never got stale or sterile. Come to think of it, if the Mark III did not use common controls for all three channels and Mark IV having the same issue with RHY1 and RHY2 I probably would have kept them. Perhaps the reason why the Mark V was a hit from the start was all three channels were separated. the RA100 is an exception as the Hi/Lo character is great such that I do not what to adjust the settings to achieve different character (not yet anyway). Roadster has 4 independent channels that satisfies me in all respects. It the Mark V had the same temperament as the JP I would be raving about it. If they were all vegetables, I would rate the V as a Potato. The RA100 as an Onion, the Roadster as a Jalapeno, and the JP as a Habanero. Probably a poor analogy. I had to remove the Mark V from the location of the JP as I was spending more time trying to make the V sound better. I had to realize it is what it is what it is. Go figure, I would prefer Class A/B over the Simul-Class as that has won me over with the RA and Roadster. Just a note, I believe what I think is sterile in the V may have more to do with the preamp than the power section. I do recall running the Mark V send out into the Roadster return (slave) to see if there was much of a difference. It sounded very much the same thought he Class A/B power section of the Roadster as it does with the Simul-Class of the Mark V. The differences really do not become apparent until you can spend time with each all in the same room with what ever guitar you have. I have 10 electric guitars to choose from, and they are not all of the same type of tone woods. I have yet to cycle though all of them but will soon enough. So far my favorite is a guitar of mahogany construction (set neck) with a quilted maple top wood, ebony fret board, all tied together with a locking Floyd Rose bridge system. My second choice is an all maple bolt on neck coupled to a black limba body topped with flamed maple cap, single coil sized humbuckers, and Floyd Rose. I have a few neck though guitars of various woods, walnut with maple neck, Alder with maple neck, Koa with maple neck, and the list goes on. Two other set neck guitars both primarily made of mahogany one is like my favorite but without Floyd and the other is similar to a Les Paul. I definitely can tell the difference between the guitars though the JP. Much more noticeable than say the Roadster or RA100.
If I have not started to repeat myself, you are in luck.... If I am repeating myself, I am sorry as this record is broken or only has one side to play.
The JP is as easy to dial in as the RA100 (if you have not had the pleasure to play through one of those, I can honestly say I know what you are missing 8) ) but there are subtle clues there is more to it than just a simple setting so it can be as intuitive as the Roadster (what effects your tone and how to get more out of your settings). That is meant to be a pun as the Roadster can be difficult to understand but once you do it is amazing. You do not need to use a decoder ring to figure out how to get clean, crunch and bite like you would with the Mark III, Mark IV. It does not have any useless voices like edge or tweed that is found on the Mark V. (I love tweed on the Roadster but not on the V). [perhaps I lost my way with the V and will have to dig up the manual to try the sample settings once again, yep, may need the decoder ring with this one too.....Roadster also needs a decoder ring but cannot use the same concepts as what you would find with the Mark amps... When dialing in the Roadster or Rectifier amp, you need to forget what you learned from using a Mark amp as it is not as it appears.]