screamingdaisy said:
Bring the channel master down to around 9:00. At that setting you'll be overdriving the piss out of your effects loop, which is probably why you're getting feedback when no one else is.
Probably not the effects loop though - unlike some other Mesa amps, the Mark V places the channel Master
after the FX loop.
Manual, p. 38:
MASTER: This control determines the overall output level of each Channel and is located at the very end of the preamp.
...
The MASTER also functions as an EFFECTS RETURN control for the EFFECTS LOOP when the LOOP is engaged (LOOP ACTIVE,
toggle up).
But diming the Master is indeed a pretty bad idea in any case, as pointed out by several posters already.
ryjan said:
Mark amps have a really stiff and dry feel to them
Umm, no, not all of them. Just the more modern ones.
A Mark I or a IIc+ (esp.
without Simul) is anything but stiff - they are very organic.
Now a IV is a different matter, and the V takes what you call stiff/dry feel to a new level. It seems a conscious design decision, and not necessarily a bad thing. For some styles, you want precise and well defined attack and focused tone. The V offers that in spades.