Hey all,
Just picked up a Rectoverb Combo (Series 1) for an amazing price, love it even with the "issues" I'm now looking at.
The guy I bought it from live in an apartment complex with quiet hours (which of course was the only time we could meet), so I didn't have the opportunity to crank the amp, but it sounded good, so I took it. Now that I have it home, I'm noticing a faint buzzing/rattling sound when I play on channel two (even at moderately low volumes - i.e. 8 o'clock output). Before I walked out the door, he said he had to tighten something, as he'd just had the tubes replaced and hadn't gotten around to doing it yet. I didn't catch exactly what he said he was doing but he tightened up some screws in the area that would be behind the "Mesa Engineering" logo on the front grille. Anyone know what's in the area that could've needed tightening? (I can see some screws, but I don't want to mess with it unless I know what I'm doing). Could this be another component rattling around instead (like the tubes), or is this normal with all the air being pushed with the speaker?
tl;dr - There's a faint buzzing (NOT hum from the electronics), is it normal, or do I need to troubleshoot?
I loved the clean channel, but found the distortion a bit "loose." I know that seemed to be the general consensus in the reviews that I read, but I figured that playing around with the built in eq would help a bit. Despite this, I still can't get a good tone out of the distortion channel, it just seems off (for lead work, the rhythm aspect of the distortion sounds awesome and full). I'm told that buying a pedal would help this, namely a boost or OD. Anyone have any thoughts on which work best with Mesa products in general? I'm also looking into the 10-band eq from MXR as being a good aid to tighten up the sound, has anyone had experience with this unit with the 'verb?
I'm also noticing that there almost seems to be a slight distortion overtone that almost sounds like the note is being played and then the "tightness" kicks in after a couple milliseconds. Is it just me hearing things, or do I need to continue playing with the eq to eliminate this? (Sounds a bit fuzzy, which hinders lead work) The solo function REALLY helps clear this up, but I still feel like it could be better...thoughts?
tl;dr - The distortion channel needs help: which OD/Boost is good to use, would an external eq help, and how can I use the amp itself to tighten the sound up for lead work. (almost sounds fuzzy)
Last, but not least, I'm currently looking to pick up a G-major for FX processing. Has anyone had personal experience with this unit and the 'verb? And would it provide the features, like the EQ, and Boost/OD that I mentioned in the previous "section?" There was also the issue of heat being produced. I know that tube amps run warm, but how warm is normal (I didn't see it in Mesa's manual for the amp, maybe I missed it)?
Any insight you guys can offer would be great, as I know that this amazing amp can only get better from here.
-B
One thing I just noticed:
I powered the amp off about 2 minutes ago, and got that "clicky" sound that comes from turning the amp off. But now, after those two minutes, there's been several noises (like "aftershocks" for lack of a better word) that keep coming. They've stopped about 5 minutes after turning the amp off. I didn't read about this anywhere, is it normal, or should I have it checked out?
Just picked up a Rectoverb Combo (Series 1) for an amazing price, love it even with the "issues" I'm now looking at.
The guy I bought it from live in an apartment complex with quiet hours (which of course was the only time we could meet), so I didn't have the opportunity to crank the amp, but it sounded good, so I took it. Now that I have it home, I'm noticing a faint buzzing/rattling sound when I play on channel two (even at moderately low volumes - i.e. 8 o'clock output). Before I walked out the door, he said he had to tighten something, as he'd just had the tubes replaced and hadn't gotten around to doing it yet. I didn't catch exactly what he said he was doing but he tightened up some screws in the area that would be behind the "Mesa Engineering" logo on the front grille. Anyone know what's in the area that could've needed tightening? (I can see some screws, but I don't want to mess with it unless I know what I'm doing). Could this be another component rattling around instead (like the tubes), or is this normal with all the air being pushed with the speaker?
tl;dr - There's a faint buzzing (NOT hum from the electronics), is it normal, or do I need to troubleshoot?
I loved the clean channel, but found the distortion a bit "loose." I know that seemed to be the general consensus in the reviews that I read, but I figured that playing around with the built in eq would help a bit. Despite this, I still can't get a good tone out of the distortion channel, it just seems off (for lead work, the rhythm aspect of the distortion sounds awesome and full). I'm told that buying a pedal would help this, namely a boost or OD. Anyone have any thoughts on which work best with Mesa products in general? I'm also looking into the 10-band eq from MXR as being a good aid to tighten up the sound, has anyone had experience with this unit with the 'verb?
I'm also noticing that there almost seems to be a slight distortion overtone that almost sounds like the note is being played and then the "tightness" kicks in after a couple milliseconds. Is it just me hearing things, or do I need to continue playing with the eq to eliminate this? (Sounds a bit fuzzy, which hinders lead work) The solo function REALLY helps clear this up, but I still feel like it could be better...thoughts?
tl;dr - The distortion channel needs help: which OD/Boost is good to use, would an external eq help, and how can I use the amp itself to tighten the sound up for lead work. (almost sounds fuzzy)
Last, but not least, I'm currently looking to pick up a G-major for FX processing. Has anyone had personal experience with this unit and the 'verb? And would it provide the features, like the EQ, and Boost/OD that I mentioned in the previous "section?" There was also the issue of heat being produced. I know that tube amps run warm, but how warm is normal (I didn't see it in Mesa's manual for the amp, maybe I missed it)?
Any insight you guys can offer would be great, as I know that this amazing amp can only get better from here.
-B
One thing I just noticed:
I powered the amp off about 2 minutes ago, and got that "clicky" sound that comes from turning the amp off. But now, after those two minutes, there's been several noises (like "aftershocks" for lack of a better word) that keep coming. They've stopped about 5 minutes after turning the amp off. I didn't read about this anywhere, is it normal, or should I have it checked out?