A
Anonymous
Guest
I'm wondering how many people have similar thoughts in mind as me in posting this. Lately I've been doing some amp shopping and finally finished my tone quest with an Uberschall Twin Jet. I've got some nice amps and had quite a bit of cash to lay down, and so in finding the amp, I was looking for the best of something. IMO, the Uberschall does metal the way it's supposed to be done: with balls like nothing else.
I owned a Mark V for a brief period and also tested out a whole bunch of other gear including other Mesa stuff, Diezel, Engl, and a Bogner Fish. The Engl stuff sounded a little, for lack of a better word, constipated. The Diezel stuff was very good, but not really organic enough; I liked it a lot, but wasn't ready to drop $4k on one. The Bogner stuff sounds amazing to me; I have instantly loved every amp I've heard of his that's set up properly.
This leaves Mesa. Please understand that I love what mesa does; they're the only company that's able to pack so much into one amp, and the Mark V looks like one of the most well-designed, logical amps I've ever seen. I love the Rectifiers as well; I know the Uber will cover similar ground, but I wouldn't be surprised if I liked them both about the same in terms of tone. However, what I can't get my head around is the cold bias for anything other than clean tones or Rectifiers.
To me it means one of two things: either they actually believe the cold bias sounds best, or they realize it doesn't sound best and are alright with that because of the added reliability. What I'm curious to hear about - my point in writing this - is to ask what people have either to add to this, or what might you say to defend this design. Unless I'm missing something, at this point, it's unlikely I'll ever buy another Mesa unless it's only for high gain application.
Thanks in advance for your replies!
I owned a Mark V for a brief period and also tested out a whole bunch of other gear including other Mesa stuff, Diezel, Engl, and a Bogner Fish. The Engl stuff sounded a little, for lack of a better word, constipated. The Diezel stuff was very good, but not really organic enough; I liked it a lot, but wasn't ready to drop $4k on one. The Bogner stuff sounds amazing to me; I have instantly loved every amp I've heard of his that's set up properly.
This leaves Mesa. Please understand that I love what mesa does; they're the only company that's able to pack so much into one amp, and the Mark V looks like one of the most well-designed, logical amps I've ever seen. I love the Rectifiers as well; I know the Uber will cover similar ground, but I wouldn't be surprised if I liked them both about the same in terms of tone. However, what I can't get my head around is the cold bias for anything other than clean tones or Rectifiers.
To me it means one of two things: either they actually believe the cold bias sounds best, or they realize it doesn't sound best and are alright with that because of the added reliability. What I'm curious to hear about - my point in writing this - is to ask what people have either to add to this, or what might you say to defend this design. Unless I'm missing something, at this point, it's unlikely I'll ever buy another Mesa unless it's only for high gain application.
Thanks in advance for your replies!