After getting my Mark IIB, I have been peaking around for a Mark III and found this guy locally. It is #25 of the Mark III series dated 4/85. DRG, 105pt, g12-125 speaker and Imbuia hardwood cabinet (or Imbuya, not sure of correct spelling, someone educate me, got mixed results from the wisdom of the internet). Has all 3 pedals which I think is kind of rare since I don't see many for sale with them all.
The guy I bought this from got this in 1985 in a store up in Baltimore Maryland after someone ordered 2 of them and returned them the next day because he hated them. MSRP was $1,800 and he walked out with one for $1,250. Had a great time talking to this guy because he was from my neck of the woods and used to go into Paul Reed Smith's guitar shop before he became what PRS is today.
Anyway, the amp is in fantastic shape and sounds even better. I played this as is and then ran it through my Fryette PS2 attenuator and 2x12 vertical cab. The attenuator is great for cranking everything up and getting that metal sound but there is something special about playing this as is through the combo itself. Not sure if it's the wood or the speaker or the combination of both but it is just beautiful sounding. Quick comparison with the Mark IIB attenuated and the Mark III can definitely get heavier but I think the IIB hung in there very well. Still some experimenting to do to see how close I can get them.
Thank you to Electric Mayhem for your advice!
Enjoy an absurd amount of pics!
The guy I bought this from got this in 1985 in a store up in Baltimore Maryland after someone ordered 2 of them and returned them the next day because he hated them. MSRP was $1,800 and he walked out with one for $1,250. Had a great time talking to this guy because he was from my neck of the woods and used to go into Paul Reed Smith's guitar shop before he became what PRS is today.
Anyway, the amp is in fantastic shape and sounds even better. I played this as is and then ran it through my Fryette PS2 attenuator and 2x12 vertical cab. The attenuator is great for cranking everything up and getting that metal sound but there is something special about playing this as is through the combo itself. Not sure if it's the wood or the speaker or the combination of both but it is just beautiful sounding. Quick comparison with the Mark IIB attenuated and the Mark III can definitely get heavier but I think the IIB hung in there very well. Still some experimenting to do to see how close I can get them.
Thank you to Electric Mayhem for your advice!
Enjoy an absurd amount of pics!