Sicarii
Member
Thought I'd shed some light on the earlier post requesting info for the maverick and heartbreaker. Although this is my first post on this board, I have haunted the ezboard boogie forum for many years.
I own a 1999 Mesa Maverick 2x12. The maverick was put into the lineup to appeal to "lower gain" and "roots" players, basically blues, country, classic rock type people. It is a 2 channel amplifier, and is relatively simple for a mesa. The clean channel has gain (labelled volume), treble, mid, bass, reverb, and channel volume. The distortion channel has the same, and then there is a global master volume. There is also a bright/fat switch for the clean channel, which basically pushes the channel into some breakup easier if you switch it to fat.
It has the typical rectifier select switch, an effects loop, and a slave output on the back.
The Mav is a 35 watt amplifier, it runs 4 el84 tubes class A in the power supply. The best analogy I can think of for this amp is a hot rodded vox ac30. You are going to get that classic el84 british vox sound but there is a lot more gain on tap than an ac30 could provide and of course, 2 discreet channels with separate eq.
In my experience, this amp is absolutely awesome. No question about it. The cleans are phenomenal, especially with my G&L Legacy (strat). The great thing about the clean channel is the breakup you can get from it by turning up the gain and clicking the fat switch. The mid gain tones in this setting are unbelievable! The second channel does have quite a bit of gain. When I was originally going to buy this amp I was worried by Mesa's write up that it wouldn't have enough gain for good rock tones. After owning it for two years, I would say yes and no to that. Basically, the gain you get from the distortion channel is very guitar dependant. My Les Paul Classic drives that channel with serious authority, and it gets an extremely harmonic solo sound. But the single-coil G&L just can't push the preamp like the Les Paul can. I have found that the amp responds extremely well to a mild overdrive pedal, such as a tube screamer, or OD-1. That pedal really makes the maverick setup complete. The input is extremely sensitive to being overdriven by a hot pickup or overdrive pedal.
The maverick won't be suitable for metal players or for "hard rock" players. It should pretty much appeal to the same people who are looking at the lonestar special. It is a great class A tube amp, and can NAIL vintage rock tones. The cleans channel is basically your vox ac30 tone, plus you get a really great sounding gain channel. My one complaint about the Maverick would be that the low end for the gain channel is only "adequate". It just won't get good low-end chunkiness. But, as I said before, it is really not a metal or even a hard rock amp.
If you really want great vintage tones but don't want to pay for or mess with the hassles of buying old voxes or marshalls, this is the amp for you. It gets that classic british class A sound in a no-fuss, built-like-a-tank package.
I own a 1999 Mesa Maverick 2x12. The maverick was put into the lineup to appeal to "lower gain" and "roots" players, basically blues, country, classic rock type people. It is a 2 channel amplifier, and is relatively simple for a mesa. The clean channel has gain (labelled volume), treble, mid, bass, reverb, and channel volume. The distortion channel has the same, and then there is a global master volume. There is also a bright/fat switch for the clean channel, which basically pushes the channel into some breakup easier if you switch it to fat.
It has the typical rectifier select switch, an effects loop, and a slave output on the back.
The Mav is a 35 watt amplifier, it runs 4 el84 tubes class A in the power supply. The best analogy I can think of for this amp is a hot rodded vox ac30. You are going to get that classic el84 british vox sound but there is a lot more gain on tap than an ac30 could provide and of course, 2 discreet channels with separate eq.
In my experience, this amp is absolutely awesome. No question about it. The cleans are phenomenal, especially with my G&L Legacy (strat). The great thing about the clean channel is the breakup you can get from it by turning up the gain and clicking the fat switch. The mid gain tones in this setting are unbelievable! The second channel does have quite a bit of gain. When I was originally going to buy this amp I was worried by Mesa's write up that it wouldn't have enough gain for good rock tones. After owning it for two years, I would say yes and no to that. Basically, the gain you get from the distortion channel is very guitar dependant. My Les Paul Classic drives that channel with serious authority, and it gets an extremely harmonic solo sound. But the single-coil G&L just can't push the preamp like the Les Paul can. I have found that the amp responds extremely well to a mild overdrive pedal, such as a tube screamer, or OD-1. That pedal really makes the maverick setup complete. The input is extremely sensitive to being overdriven by a hot pickup or overdrive pedal.
The maverick won't be suitable for metal players or for "hard rock" players. It should pretty much appeal to the same people who are looking at the lonestar special. It is a great class A tube amp, and can NAIL vintage rock tones. The cleans channel is basically your vox ac30 tone, plus you get a really great sounding gain channel. My one complaint about the Maverick would be that the low end for the gain channel is only "adequate". It just won't get good low-end chunkiness. But, as I said before, it is really not a metal or even a hard rock amp.
If you really want great vintage tones but don't want to pay for or mess with the hassles of buying old voxes or marshalls, this is the amp for you. It gets that classic british class A sound in a no-fuss, built-like-a-tank package.