Yeah I did, I must have been loving the amp at the moment I wrote that... I did post on that again and considered the Roadster as an alternate to consider. I have a bipolar relationship with the Mark V (love/hate). When I feel the amp sound great and loving the sound stage it sometimes does something I find annoying or it craps out. I have had more issues with the Mark V than any other Mesa amp I have owned. Mark III over 24 years of faithful and reliable service. Sold it before getting the Mark V. The Mark IV on the other hand has been great for 14 years but seems outdated when compared to the Mark V. When I got the RA100 (felt the Mark V was missing or lacking the right stuff for a good classic rock character), I was amazed on how incredible just a two channel amp could be. Very straight forward and exceptional quality in workmanship, design, overall a class act. It can do metal with an OD on the front end but sounds great without it. The Roadster in my opinion is TOP DOG !. I just can't stop playing though it. After exploring all of the possibilities, change in tube characteristics, different speaker cabinets, full stack vs half stack. Every thing about the Roadster is amazing. As far as gain character, tone and overall performance, the Mark V does not compare. Sure it is nice to have the various tone and character of the older Mark Series amps, Mark IV, Mark IIC, and Mark I. It does a few things well, but lacks in other features. What I dislike about the Mark V which drives me nuts, ice pick tones that are difficult to tame. I generally run the treble low and boost the mid frequencies. I believe the issue with the super bright character is associated with the higher bias. I am so tempted to adjust it to match the Mark IV which at least is not an ice pick. The class A 45W power mode is not very pleasing either. This is the mode that is hard on power tubes and I usually red plate tubes in a few hours. I was playing around with a tube roll with the Mark V yesterday. I wanted to see how well the TAD6L6GC-STR would survive 45W mode. I had about 4 months of use or less on these tubes. 15 minutes is all it took to push a glow on the seam of the plates. I stopped before the red glow went any further. When I put the amp back together, I would up with a short in one of the outer tubes next to the one that was overheating. TAD6L6GC-STR are now toast (tubes were specifically bought for a hot bias for the Mark V), too bad they sounded really good too. I basically cannot run the Mark V in 45W mode (well I can but not for very long). :evil: To be honest, I believe the class A/B power section of the Roadster and RA100 sound way better in 50W than the class A circuit in 45W in either the Mark V or Mark IVB. At full power, the Roadster and RA100 just kick ***. Simul-Class 90W Class A/B mode just does not compare. It is not all that bad but a true Class A/B just sounds better. Tweed voice of the Mark V sounds good with low gain setting for an alternate clean, trying to get some dirt on that tends to become an ice pick very quickly. Roadster on the other hand is pure bliss in TWEED from clean to grinding The more I explore the Roadster, the more I love it :shock: As it seems, the more time I spend with the Roadster, the Mark V is becoming more of a disappointment, considering the cost is the same. I still enjoy the Mark V despite the issues I have had with it, not sure if it is a keeper at the moment (I must be having a bipolar moment with the V again). The Roadster and RA100 are definitely keepers. Considering I have the 5 band EQ pedal, I can get similar tones our of the Roadster (using an inverted V on the sliders, ^ vs v ). I have been playing with the eq in the loop. With an inverted V shape or ^ having the low and upper sliders at the center line I can use the effect as a mid boost that really brightens up the amp and gives it an edge in tone. I get the best of both worlds here without having to change tubes in V1 to a tung sol. The Roadster has really sold me on Mesa tubes too. I recently bought a full set for the Roadster so I have fresh replacements when the time comes.