I have started to take a closer look at the Mark VII. What does each mode have for me to discover and what does it sound like. I did another review of the manual to get a better sense of each mode. It was mentioned that the crunch and VII modes were similar to the Triple Crown and Badlander. The TC has more of a Brit flavor in its tone so we can set that one aside. The Badlander does have some similar traits to the Mark VII. Both crunch modes are very similar to each other. The same would apply to the Mark V. Thinking the VII mode was like the V90: CH3 was a good assumption. Different circuit topography but the change in the negative feedback (Presence Control) does have a similar effect as the Modern modes on a Dual Rectifier. It is just not the same thing. Sure, the Badlander is different but does sound similar to the JP2C and Mark VII.
Just for kicks. I was running the Bad and Mark VII side by side but taking into account the tone similarities between the two. I did not start with the clean but ended up there. Badlander clean is not quite what you would call a Fender circuit. Nope, The tone stack is not on the front end following the first gain stage, the signal is forced into a funnel through a DC coupled cathode follower circuit used as a tone stack driver. Yeah, that sounds bad, it really is BAD. Love the clean mode on the Badlander as it is more than just clean. I can get that mode to drive as hard as the crunch modes with the gain at noon. Can the Mark VII do this too? I tried with the FAT mode. It was a bit rich on the low end to push it hard into clip. However, that thinner sounding clean mode is where that is at. Drive the gain up to 3pm or 4pm and it will rip just like the Badlander clean with a moderate gain setting. It sounds better with the GEQ turned on. Was only curious if the mark VII clean had any bite to it. It does.
Now to the point, crunch vs crunch. I did try the VII without the GEQ but could not get a good match between the two amps. This is probably the first time I noticed the sub harmonics of the Badlander. It is not like that of a Dual Rec but there are some low frequencies that were difficult to emulate on the Mark VII. That changed once I turned on the GEQ and made some adjustments. You can get very close but will never achieve the same tone since one was sporting the EL34 power tubes and the other 6L6GC. If you ever saw Mesa's description of the STR445 when they first came out, they are described as having a 6CA7 character but in a 6L6GC. Now the obvious difference other than the power tubes would be in the preamp. Just for fact seekers out there, I did get confirmation from MESA through the customer service by email. Asked where the tone stack resides in Crunch and MKVII modes. The red color indicates it is part of the lead drive circuit that is common to all Mark amps. Tone stack now becomes post gain. This is also similar with the Mark V90 CH2 circuitry. The purple color indicates it is a Cathode follower. The double triode with the purple color is a DC coupled Cathode follower circuit. The light blue is the cold clipper circuit. The other colors were just there for adding some contrast.
The Mark VII mode compared to Crush of the Badlander.
As I stated before, I can get very close with each amp. The Badlander seems to have a more open and articulate sound and the Mark VII is slightly more condensed. No need to say tight or compressed. Those characteristics words hold true to both amps. Usually when trying to get a matching tone from two different amps, you lose that flexibility as this is just a narrow range of their capabilities.
Note that the Mark VII, JP2C, Badlander, Triple Crown, Royal Atlantic and not sure if there are others, do not have any hard bypass on the FX circuitry. The Badlander and Royal Atlantic do not have any means to bypass the FX loop jacks other than the internal switch that is connected in the return jack. All of the other amps in the list to have a relay of sorts to split the shorting connection between send and return to run the loop. The JP2C can only turn off the FX loop with the mini toggle switch as this function is not included with the footswitch.
Amps like the Mark V90, MWDR, Roadster, Road King, and some not listed do have a hard bypass to circumvent the fx circuitry. Meaning the Send/return tubes are out of the signal chain.
Sure, lots of words and interesting graphics. Sorry no pictures at this time. Considering another video but more focused on the Mark VII. More of a comparison to the Badlander and JP2C. In some ways the Mark VII has crossed boundaries. It is not just a novel collection of a few Mark series amps like the Mark V90 but it is a composition of the Mark series amps from the IIB up to the IV and has a Badlander included in the package. For me it is a really good fit for my dual BAD rig setup. I am still pondering the idea of getting out the one standard 412 to use with the Mark VII and retain the Vertical 212 cabs for the Badlanders or just run three vertical 212 cabs to retain my hearing. Going for the 412 cab and will go back if that is too much for the small room.