DC42 said:Agreed....have fun with yours as well! Off topic a bit I liked the EL34L's on channels 1 & 2 but not 3. Did not spend a lot of time on that channel so can probably tweak a bit more.
DC42 said:Agreed....have fun with yours as well! Off topic a bit I liked the EL34L's on channels 1 & 2 but not 3. Did not spend a lot of time on that channel so can probably tweak a bit more.
DC42 said:The fan is ultra quiet in the Mark V I have. Had a TC-100 and the fan was annoying (at small room levels). Couldn't hear it when playing but when taking a break it drove me nuts. Was going to swap it out but sold the amp.
Was surprised at the quiet level of the fan in the Mark V (90W). Same with noise level on the amp overall. Had a Mark V:25 which I thought was kind of noisy.
DC
vapul said:I also just picked up a new mark v 35 head, from Sweetwater as well. It's been many years since I've owned a boogie (mark iii head), or even a tube amp. For low practicing volumes the tones sound good if you dial them in (as usual), but I forgot how audible tube amps can be in a quiet room. the fan / analog operating noise isn't really loud but it's always there. My old mark iii wasn't the quietest of amps but that was 100w and really only used in a band rehearsal / gig setting.
Not keen on swapping out the fan on such a new unit. How are you guys finding modern boogies in terms of overall operating noise for low volume practice?
vapul said:DC42 said:The fan is ultra quiet in the Mark V I have. Had a TC-100 and the fan was annoying (at small room levels). Couldn't hear it when playing but when taking a break it drove me nuts. Was going to swap it out but sold the amp.
Was surprised at the quiet level of the fan in the Mark V (90W). Same with noise level on the amp overall. Had a Mark V:25 which I thought was kind of noisy.
DC
Thanks for the input. I'm gonna keep an eye (or ear) on it. Like I said I haven't owned a tube amp in quite some time. Nothing sounds "wrong", it's not a tube issue or a rattle / bolt thing. It's probably normal fan / analog component noise that I'll either have to get used to. This thing sounds great so I don't want to nitpick here.
zolimer said:vapul said:DC42 said:The fan is ultra quiet in the Mark V I have. Had a TC-100 and the fan was annoying (at small room levels). Couldn't hear it when playing but when taking a break it drove me nuts. Was going to swap it out but sold the amp.
Was surprised at the quiet level of the fan in the Mark V (90W). Same with noise level on the amp overall. Had a Mark V:25 which I thought was kind of noisy.
DC
Thanks for the input. I'm gonna keep an eye (or ear) on it. Like I said I haven't owned a tube amp in quite some time. Nothing sounds "wrong", it's not a tube issue or a rattle / bolt thing. It's probably normal fan / analog component noise that I'll either have to get used to. This thing sounds great so I don't want to nitpick here.
I will be honest with you, I don't think you can fall in love with this amp unless you try to push it a little bit. Low-volume practice is fine, but you're going to fall in love with this thing if you crank it up
By the way, if you do crank it up turn the fan on. LOL
zolimer said:vapul said:I also just picked up a new mark v 35 head, from Sweetwater as well. It's been many years since I've owned a boogie (mark iii head), or even a tube amp. For low practicing volumes the tones sound good if you dial them in (as usual), but I forgot how audible tube amps can be in a quiet room. the fan / analog operating noise isn't really loud but it's always there. My old mark iii wasn't the quietest of amps but that was 100w and really only used in a band rehearsal / gig setting.
Not keen on swapping out the fan on such a new unit. How are you guys finding modern boogies in terms of overall operating noise for low volume practice?
My fan is quiet as well. It doesn't bother me at all. But I will quote Mesa's advice out of my manual for my mark five.
" The cooling fan is fitted with an on/off switch to allow silent running in the studio or late night practicing and lower wattage settings. We recommend leaving the fan on whenever possible to increase the tone full life of your power tubes. Basically if the sound doesn't bother you.. Leave the cooling fan on all the time"
So it looks like if you want to leave the fan off specially in the lower watt settings the only thing you have to lose is a little bit of tube life. No harm no foul.
Enter your email address to join: