T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1853.1 | Boogie 400+ bass head w/mega tubes! | SALEM::ABATELLI | Labs_R_Us | Mon Jun 11 1990 10:49 | 9 |
| Check out the new Boogie 400+ bass head with twelve... count them,
*12* 6L6GC power tubes in it!!!!! Didn't check on the price cause
all I kept thinking was, "gee, if I had to retube this head it'd
cost around $300.00 just for "Boogie" power tubes"! After that, I
wasn't interested much. Didn't look very different at all from the
original 400 head either. It must really pack a punch though.
Rock on,
Fred
|
1853.2 | Potential test drive.... | ROYALT::BUSENBARK | | Thu Sep 27 1990 11:57 | 8 |
| Daddy's in Nashua,NH just got one of these in.... It really looks
pretty versatile and impressive. It's features seem to include just
about everything they have ever Engineered and built in there combo
amp's,preamps and power amp's and then some.....I'd call first to make
sure it's still there... :^)
Rick
|
1853.3 | | BSS::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Thu Sep 27 1990 12:04 | 9 |
| I just had Boogie send me all the written literature they have on it.
To summarize: If I had the money, I'd have ordered one 10 minutes into
the owners manual.
Somebody wanna buy my Mark IIC? $1400 is a little high. I'll come off
to $1200! ;^)
Will (who's trying to save money on gear and people [Boogie] keeps
sabotaging the attempt [Aw shucks!])
|
1853.4 | | PNO::HEISER | midnight moon weaving her chain | Thu Sep 27 1990 13:16 | 4 |
| So what is different from the MKIII?
Thanks,
Mike
|
1853.5 | | BSS::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Thu Sep 27 1990 13:42 | 7 |
| I just started to write it up from memory and can't get it close
enough. I'll try to post a fairly complete list in the next few days.
It is quite a bit more flexible, with the three channels operating much
more independently.
Will
|
1853.6 | | CSC32::H_SO | Hyundai insider: I drive a Chevy | Thu Sep 27 1990 20:24 | 12 |
|
MKIII - Three channels (plus one extra "ghost channel" I've found out
that Mesa doesn't advertise).
MKII - Two channels.
I've heard/seen Will's MKII next to my MKIII half stack, that little
thing SCREAMS!!!
Hey Will. When are we gonna dodat ageeen? That was a lot of fun.
I'll see if I could track down our groupies again, too! ;^)
J.
|
1853.7 | Mark IV Controls and Features list | BSS::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Fri Sep 28 1990 14:07 | 73 |
| Here's the Mark IIC & III controls:
Volume 1, pull for bright
Treble, pull for shift (fattens mids)
Bass, pull for deep (deepens bass)
Middle, on the Mark III, pull for rhythm 2 channel
Master 1, pull for gain boost (works with volume one)
Lead Drive, pull for lead (if you forget your footswitch)
Lead Master, pull for bright (sets lead channel output volume)
Presence
Reverb (Optional)
5 band EQ (Optional)
Slave Out level
Simul-Class Power (Optional) with Simul-Class/Class-A switch
One effects loop
Here's the Mark IV controls:
Rhythm 1 Gain, pull for bright
Rhythm 1 Treble
Rhythm 1 (shared with rhythm 2) Bass
Rhythm 1 (shared with rhythm 2) Middle
Rhythm 1 Presence
Rhythm 1 Master
Rhythm 2 Gain, pull for fat
Rhythm 2 Treble
Rhythm 2 (shared with rhythm 1) Bass
Rhythm 2 (shared with rhythm 1) Middle
Rhythm 2 Presence, pull for shift (shift on: higher freqs effected)
Rhythm 2 Master
Lead Gain, pull for fat
Lead Treble
Lead Bass
Lead Middle
Lead Drive, pull for bright
Lead Presence, pull for shift (as above)
Lead Master
Output Level (controls output of amp in all modes)
5 band EQ (Standard)
Silent Recording switch (turns off the output, don't have to disconnect
the speaker, signal still regulated by Output Level)
Tweed Power Switch (works like built in variac)
Reverb (Standard)
Slave Out
2 Effects loops, one is switchable
Simul-Class Power (Standard) with Simul-Class/Class-A switch
Triode/Pentode Switch (reconfigures class A side, triode is smoother)
Harmonics/Mid Gain Switch (in Lead Mode, fattens the mids, etc)
Power Tube Substitution (depending on the modes selected by Teed and
Simul-Class switch, class A tubes can be 6L6's, EL34's, 6V6's, 5881's)
External switch jacks for footswitch so can be Midi controlled
Footswitch is now digital in nature instead of the old mechanical one
Rhytm 1, Rhytm 2, Lead, Lead EQ, FX Loop all on on switch panel
Boogie's direct price: $1595.00
In 1984, my Mark-IIC with all the options (the wood cabinet was $200)
was $1670. So figure it's another $150 or so over the older amp with
all the new features.
Will
|
1853.8 | | BSS::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Fri Sep 28 1990 14:08 | 4 |
| Oh yeah, it still fits in the little 1X12 box that it they always have
used. Two rows of knobs on the front now.
Will
|
1853.9 | | CSC32::H_SO | Hyundai insider: I drive a Chevy | Fri Sep 28 1990 18:09 | 3 |
|
Wowsers! I thought MKII(I) controls were hard to get useta!
|
1853.10 | Man, there's a ton 'o knobs on this thing! | ISLNDS::KELLY | | Fri Oct 12 1990 12:08 | 7 |
| Anyone test driven a Mark IV yet? Also, if the IV price is $1595,
does anyone know what the prices on the III, II, etc are?
Does anyone have a feel for how the store price at , say Daddy's,
compares with Mesa's price?
Regards,
John
|
1853.11 | Mark IV, spirited beast. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Yes, you do need a Boogie | Fri Oct 12 1990 14:36 | 12 |
| I'm sure this amp sounds great and is very flexible. I only wish that
Mesa Boogie did things a little more straight forward. For example,
some of the controls are shared by two channels (ie. Mid controls),
while some are not. Some of the controls that players need quick
access to are mounted on the rear panel.
One of the nicest features is the silent recording switch, which allows
you to shut down the power amp. I wonder if this amp has recording
outputs that emmulate the sound of a power amp loaded by speakers.
Mark
|
1853.12 | I think Mark IV does have a recording out | XERO::ARNOLD | but it's not polite to * | Fri Oct 12 1990 16:12 | 12 |
| >>> One of the nicest features is the silent recording switch, which allows
>>> you to shut down the power amp. I wonder if this amp has recording
>>> outputs that emmulate the sound of a power amp loaded by speakers.
I'm pretty sure the picture in the Nov. 1990 Guitar Player add showe
the back panel with a "Recording Out" jack separate from the line out
for effects. I'm poresuming this is a single channel version of the
"Recording Out" speaker simulator found on the Boogie Preamp. Just a
guess, but knowing how Boogies continues to incorporate features into
newer products, it seems like a likely assumption.
- John -
|
1853.13 | controls! | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Thu Oct 18 1990 05:39 | 7 |
| I've tried a IV, but let me tell ya...
TOO many controls. takes too long to set up.
Once you do, it sounds great....
Jay Tashjian
|
1853.14 | And they call them expensive in the States..! | BAHTAT::CARR | | Thu Oct 25 1990 06:49 | 3 |
| The Mk IV is also reviewed in the UK magazine "Guitarist" November issue.
The UK price is �1695 including foot switches, a cover, and VAT.
*DC
|
1853.15 | | BSS::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Thu Oct 25 1990 18:14 | 11 |
| re -1 too many controls:
Not to sound like a salesman, but in my experience with the Mark IIC,
the controls are difficult for the new user. They are quite subtle and
take time to learn. Once you learn them, however, they're just as fast
as any other amp I've ever had, and INFINITELY more flexible, allowing
me to dial in more different tones than any other amp I've had.
JMO,
Will
|
1853.16 | | CSC32::H_SO | Hyundai insider: I drive a Chevy | Thu Oct 25 1990 20:33 | 10 |
|
Thanks for sending me mail when you got back Will!!! ;^(
Seriously, I am DEFINITELY on the same boat Will is. Took a while to
get used to, but I wouldn't trade my MK for ANYTHING except for maybe
a MKIV. Not even a single problem or complaint on my Boogie(except for
blowing a couple of slo-blows: 1 year apart), since I picked it up a
1.5 years ago.
J. Who'd_like_to_get_a_hold_of_a_decent_Boogie_combo_now
|
1853.17 | Waiting for delivery... | BAHTAT::CARR | Dave Carr 845-2317 | Tue Apr 23 1991 10:26 | 13 |
| I've just ordered one of these beasts (I should have paid for it by this
time in 1993!). I might have to wait until the next shipment to the UK
which could be weeks.
re: <<< Note 1853.6 by CSC32::H_SO "Hyundai insider: I drive a Chevy" >>>
� MKIII - Three channels (plus one extra "ghost channel" I've found out
� that Mesa doesn't advertise).
I am intrigued. How do you use the "ghost" channel... and is it also on the
Mk IV?
*DC
|
1853.18 | | KEBLER::WSC100::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Tue Apr 23 1991 11:46 | 3 |
| God, I'm jealous! ;^)
Will (Mark-IIC owner)
|
1853.19 | Strangulated hernia imminent | BAHTAT::CARR | Dave Carr 845-2317 | Mon May 20 1991 10:03 | 7 |
| Well, I've finally got it, and I was surprised at the weight of it.
I believe it's heavier than the Mk III (must be some white dwarf star
material in there 8^)). Thank **** for the castors. Once I get it into
the flight case I've ordered for it, I'm going to need a block and tackle
to lift it!
Oh, and it's also very loud.
*DC
|
1853.20 | Jazzman Boogies | RANGER::WEBER | | Mon Jun 10 1991 16:47 | 46 |
| Despite years of contentment with my present amp, I decided to take a
look at a Mk IV. There wasn't anything in particular I was looking
for--I just wanted to see if it is as transcendental as a number of
players I know claim it to be.
The combo w/EV speaker had just been unpacked and had all its controls
turned to zero. I plugged my sunburst 355 into it , selected Pentode,
Simul-Class, Harmonics and Full Power and started turning up some of
the controls. The first sounds I got were thin and ugly, but I kept at
it. In about 10 minutes I had three voices that were wonderful--a
clean, full R1, a dark, rich R2 and a lovely, singing lead that worked
well with chords, too. I would have liked a little more bass response
in R1 mode, but I'm used to a 15" speaker.
After playing with these awhile, I tried some of the other switch
positions. Selecting Triode operation made the amp sound as if it were
working a little harder. Class A /Triode sounded like a small amp being
pushed, but hanging in there. Tweed power really roughed up the tone,
sounding like the last set in a blues club. For my playing,
Simul/Pentode/Full worked the best.
Some of the replies here have suggested that Boogies are compressed
sounding. I didn't find that to be the case--I thought the amp was very
responsive to dynamics in all modes. Some have also said that it took
too much knob-twiddling to find the sounds they wanted. While it didn't
take me very long to find good sounds, it did take longer than on most
Fenders, where I can plug in and play with almost any settings.
Whether that would be a real problem remains to be seen. I definitely
had less trouble getting it set up than the Mk II (B or C?) that I
tried when I bought my Showman--although I could get some nice sounds
out of that one, I wasn't happy with having to balance the rhythm sound
against the lead. The Mk IV solves that problem nicely.
Other complaints--too heavy for me, there seemed to be a cabinet
rattle, the knobs feel cheap, and it's relatively ugly. The first I'd
solve by getting a separate top. The second *might* have been the
instructions or a tag buzzing. The latter two are rather subjective,
but I prefer the looks of my Fender.
My expectations in auditioning this amp were that I'd go away feeling
no desire to own one. I was wrong--I ordered a short head today. I'm
going to use it with my Showman speaker until I'm sure that I like it.
You never can be too careful when it comes to amplifiers. :-)
Danny W.
|
1853.21 | | STRAT::JENSEN | Tone == JCM 900 | Mon Jun 10 1991 19:07 | 11 |
| Sounds like the MK IV may have solved the two major problems that I had with my
MK III (compressed sound and compromise on rhythm v.s. lead). Actually, I've
heard more complaints against the MK III than any of the boogie amps. Maybe it
was a mistake that they fixed in the MK IV, or maybe it was practice in
designing the MK IV.
Let us know how you like it in 3-6 months.
The number of knobs on that thing still scares me.....
steve (happy with simple controls that work).
|
1853.22 | Complex... naw, versatile. | BLKPUD::CARRD | | Tue Jun 11 1991 09:40 | 3 |
| I'm not finding it hard to control, despite the number of knobs. In
fact I gigged with the Mk IV when I'd only had it a few days.
*DC
|
1853.23 | | MILNER::WSC100::COLLUM | What?...What? | Tue Jun 11 1991 13:06 | 17 |
| All the knobs are just on one amp, that's all. No more knobs than on the
three amps to replace it with.
And if you play really different material it'll be a great piece of gear.
When I play out with my friends, we play everything from hard rock, to soft
latin jazz, to twangy country, to middle of the road soft rock. For that
wide a variety, I haven't heard anything else but a Boogie that will do it as
well.
I don't know about the Mark III's. I still get the feeling that they lost
some of that great tone that previous Boogie's had. But the Mark IV's got
it back from what I've heard. It's funny, they even reference the IIC in the
IV's owner's manual, claiming that under this or that setup, it has that
tone of the "fabled Mark IIC." They don't say anything about the Mark III.
It's like they blew it and they know it.
Will
|
1853.24 | Weber's Boogie | RANGER::WEBER | | Fri Jun 21 1991 10:49 | 32 |
| After a week of playing UPS tag, I finally got my MK-IV head. I set it
up on my Showman, discovered that the speaker cable is too short, go to
the workshop and fabricate a cable of proper length, hook everything up
and start to test it out.
Everything was going really well until I tried adjust the lead gain
knob, which promptly fell off, along with most of the shaft. GP had
mentioned the same problem.
A call to my dealer and Mesa resulted in them airlifting a replacement
pot to me, which should arrive today. I think the fan is a little
noisy, so they're sending a new one of those, too. Figuring there was
little to lose, I tried superglueing the shaft together, but wound up
glueing the pot instead--luckily, it's at about 6 or 7--a good setting
for now.
Despite the less-than-auspicious start, the amp sounds great so far. I
definitely prefer Simul-Class/Pentode/Full for my playing style, but I
haven't begun to try all the possibilities. One interesting thing has
been experimenting with the lead channel. I have my Fender set for a
very high gain, compressed sound that gives lots of smooth distortion
with lots of sustain. When I tried this on the MKIV, the distortion
seems too harsh. I was surprised, since tube amps are supposed to be
better at this than SS amps. Backing down the gain until the sound was
smoother, I reached a point where it didn't sound distorted, but seemed
to sustain just as long. This is the kind of lead sound I really like,
but haven't been able to quite get from my other amps. Since I only
play a couple of notes a minute, having them hang around awhile really
helps, and being able to do that without a high distortion sound is a
bonus.
Danny W.
|
1853.25 | getting better | RANGER::WEBER | | Fri Jun 21 1991 11:59 | 5 |
| Quick follow-up: not only did the replacement pot & fan show up this
morning, but Mesa sent a set of four 6L6's with a note apologizing for
the inconvenience. Score one for their customer service.
Danny W.
|
1853.26 | | DECWIN::KMCDONOUGH | Set Kids/Nosick | Fri Jun 21 1991 12:01 | 6 |
|
Danny, does Mesa expect you or the nearest dealer to install the pot
and fan?
Kevin
|
1853.27 | fixed it | RANGER::WEBER | | Mon Jun 24 1991 10:48 | 12 |
| It was my suggestion to have Mesa send me the parts--it seemed easier
for me to do the repair than to ship it. I wanted to use it over the
weekend, too.
It took me less than an hour to get the pot installed--I had to move
two other controls and it was a tight fit. The new fan is as noisy as
the old one, so I didn't install it. It's actually just wind noise and
it's only audible at very low playing volumes.
Anyway, it sounds great, but I'm still experimenting.
Danny W.
|
1853.28 | suggestions..... | ROYALT::BUSENBARK | | Mon Jun 24 1991 11:26 | 14 |
| Danny,
The fan in my MKIIc was noisy when I got it and after playing with
acoustically isolating it with rubber grommets,I ended up replacing it with
another ac fan which had less air flow and was quieter. The result was I
was able to cool the tubes and tolerate the noise/frequency.I'll see
if I can get you a part number/manufacturer,if your interested? I've
had a lot of good (non-warranty)service experiance with Mesa which is part of
why I like there hardware and recommend it highly to people who are looking
to get that kind of "tone quality" and quality/reliability. Now if they could
make them 50lbs lighter :^)
Rick
|
1853.29 | Now I can only count to 9... | MVSUPP::SYSTEM | Dave Carr 845-2317 | Mon Jun 24 1991 13:36 | 6 |
| re: the fan
What surprised me was that there's no guard on the fan to stop
inquiring fingers poking into it. Perhaps the fan's not powerful enough
to do any serious damage...?
*DC
|
1853.30 | whoosh | RANGER::WEBER | | Mon Jun 24 1991 18:27 | 19 |
| Rick:
I think the fan is grommet mounted. I may just unplug it when I use it
in the house, though I was thinking of putting a dropping resistor in
to slow it down. If you know of a quieter, drop-in replacement, let me
know.
As for the weight--the combo was too heavy for me, which is why I got
the head version, even though the adder for the
combo is far cheaper (like, less than the cost of the speaker alone).
By getting a Thiele cabinet, I'll have two 45lb boxes instead of one
85lb one!
re:-.1
The fan on the head is well protected from fingers--you're more likely
to burn yourself on the hot bottles!
Danny W.
|
1853.31 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Just say /NOOPT | Sat Jun 29 1991 09:18 | 37 |
| re: .24 (Weber)
> I have my Fender set for a very high gain, compressed sound that gives
> lots of smooth distortion with lots of sustain. When I tried this on
> the MKIV, the distortion seems too harsh. I was surprised, since tube
> amps are supposed to be better at this than SS amps. Backing down the
> gain until the sound was smoother, I reached a point where it didn't
> sound distorted, but seemed to sustain just as long. This is the kind
> of lead sound I really like, but haven't been able to quite get from my
> other amps.
This is what you may have heard referred to many times as the "singing
Boogie tone".
As you observed, it does not seem to be just an issue of gain.
I'm looking to get something to replace my Mark IIB because it is
hard to adust the MIIB at gigs (we've discussed this problem
elsewhere). I've tried a LOT of other amps, many that I've loved,
but (also as you observed) none of the amps I've tried seem to
have this quality, and I find that this particular "singing" aspect
is what really inspires me when I play.
The MKIV does solve the problem I have with the MKII, but I just
don't know if I can afford it. I might end up keeping the MKII
for the sheer joy of playing it, and getting something less expensive
than a MKIV to use at gigs.
db
Since I only
play a couple of notes a minute, having them hang around awhile really
helps, and being able to do that without a high distortion sound is a
bonus.
Danny W.
|
1853.32 | It sings | RANGER::WEBER | | Tue Jul 09 1991 18:40 | 40 |
| DB is right--the Mk IV sings on all channels at any volume.
But, I've uncovered a major problem. After playing with the controls a
bit, I've got such wonderful sounds coming out of it that I've stopped
experimenting. I'm sure there's some good stuff that I haven't
uncovered, but I'm having too much fun playing to get back to knob
twiddling.
I really like the effects loop setup. Since dumping my rack stuff, I've
been using just a ddl/chorus box. I want it on with the lead channel
and sometimes use it with the rhythm channel. Setting the loop switch
to Lead pulls it in automatically when the lead channel is active, and
still allows me to switch it on or off for the other channels. This is
great--it saves me from having to step on two switches when I want the
lead channel so I can actually start playing some notes before the end
of my solo :-)
The only sonic deficiency I've found is that the low end lacks the
depth of my Showman (I'm playing it through the same speaker). I'm not
surprised--I think this is an area where solid-state has a decided
advantage. At high volumes, the difference is less noticeable. The
Boogie's overall sound has much more life to it, so I think the trade
is worth it, but I'm not parting with the Showman yet. The Boogie also
has a higher noise level than the Fender, which is black-velvet quiet
at any volume, but the signal/noise ratio is adequate (the fan covers
it up at low volumes :-)).
I had been using a BB King Custom with it at first, and it sounded so
rich that I was afraid that an archtop would sound too ripe ("plummy"
is the Brit adjecti��ve), so with some trepidation I tried it with a my
very acoustic-sounding Super V BJB. It needed a slight tweak of the R1
Treble control to make it sound just like a blackface Twin--perfect. My
'63 Super 400 CES worked perfectly too: the quintessential jazz sound.
I should be receiving a Thiele cabinet in a few days. Update to follow.
Danny W.
|
1853.33 | loses tube, finds bass | RANGER::WEBER | | Tue Jul 23 1991 14:44 | 16 |
| I was distressed to have my MKIV blow a fuse last week. It didn't take
long to pin the cause down to a 6L6--using the Simul/Class-A switch
made it easy to determine which pair of tubes had the problem. Mesa
responded nicely, sending tubes and fuses right out, but now I
remember why I stopped using tube amps when I was a working musician.
I received the Thiele cabinet and have gone from not having enough bass
to having far too much. I find the Thiele to be quite boomy, even with
the bass controls way down. There is a distinct resonance between 100
and 150 Hz, which makes the B, C and C# below middle C overpowering. I
think Mesa designed this to be used in conjunction with the combo's
open back speaker rather than by itself. I have an open-back enclosure
on order which I'm hoping will turn out to be adequate alone. If not,
I'll have a mini-stack.
Danny W.
|
1853.34 | Effects Loop | BAHTAT::CARR | Dave Carr 845-2317 | Tue Jul 30 1991 10:04 | 12 |
| I haven't previously bothered using any effects with my Mk IV,
but yesterday I tried putting a Boss Chorus stomp box into the
effects loop and it worked surprisingly well. I say "surprisingly"
because I expected that only "line" level equipment (e.g. rackmount)
would be suitable for the loop. I couldn't hear any distortion
due to mismatching. Anyone know if this is supposed to work?
This is a pleasant surprise because I dislike putting effects
between the guitar and the amp (because of the inevitable loss
and signal and sound definition, even when the effect is switched-out).
*DC
|
1853.35 | works great w/ stomp boxes | RANGER::WEBER | | Wed Jul 31 1991 11:58 | 6 |
| The masters act as effect send level controls and the main volume is
the receive level control. By keeping the masters low you'll get a good
match for instrument level effects. For line level effects, raise the
masters and drop the main volume.
Danny W.
|
1853.36 | Open-back Boogie | RANGER::WEBER | | Wed Aug 28 1991 12:35 | 17 |
| My open-back, 1-12" EVM extension cabinet finally arrived, and my worst
fear is true--using both cabinets together sounds much better than
either one alone. If I had to chose one, I'd go with the open back,
even though it is somewhat bass shy: the Thiele is just too boomy by
itself. Both cabinets together weigh about what the combo weighs by
itself--at least I can carry thenm one at a time.
The two cabinets balance quite well and their deficiencies pretty much
cancel out. If you have a combo and want to fatten the bottom end,
adding a Thiele cabinet would really do the trick. The�extra volume is
a bonus.
The only jarring thing is that between the two cabinets and the head,
there are three different logo plates. It would look much nicer if they
were all the same.
Danny W.
|
1853.37 | Tuning Plug | RGB::ROST | Fart Fig Newton | Wed Aug 28 1991 13:38 | 12 |
| Danny,
From the pictures I've seen of the Boogie Thiele cab. it follows the
EV design pretty much. You can insert a tuning plug covering the
"middle" section of the port (between the two studs) and you will get a
smooth rolloff about 1/2 ocatve higher than the current -3 db point.
Since the port is behind the grille, the looks of the plug aren't
really an issue. It should be 3/4" wood, screw it to the studs and use
weather stripping to gasket it.
Brian
|
1853.38 | re:-.1 | RANGER::WEBER | | Fri Aug 30 1991 11:56 | 12 |
| Thanx for the tip, Brian. I'll give it a try as soon as I have some
leftover energy.
Meanwhile I'm having a great time playing the stack. The last "stack" I
used was in 1968 when I had two 2-15" cabinets under a Showman head.
Pretty intimidating to look at, but not much sound for all the weight
and cubic feet. Oh, I forgot my Polytone stack, a Baby Brute atop a
Minibrute IV.
The Boogie stack sounds much better than either of these.
Danny W.
|
1853.39 | Almost a year old | RANGER::WEBER | | Tue Jun 02 1992 16:30 | 50 |
| The Mk IV has been working well for awhile now--no blown 6L6's since
September and foot pedal #3 hasn't exploded yet. For most "small
venue" playing I use just the open-back cabinet and don't worry too
much about the bass missing without the Thiele. This really isn't much
of a test: in terms of sheer volume, I could easily handle most of
these gigs with a Polytone or Studio .22.
Some outdoor gigs provided more of a workout. These were low-budget
productions: no soundman; only the keyboards and vocals go into the
sound system; everything else is at stage volume. We needed to cover
about 400 people spread over a large area, at a volume level high
enough to keep everyone's attention. Not metal, but pretty loud. Since
the tunes ranged from swing to hard rock I needed the clean channel to
stay clean.
I used two Gibsons, a cherry-red Lucille and a white SG-LP Custom,
through an A-B box. A Digitech DDL/Chorus into the switchable loop was
the only effect. I set it up so the loop was always in for the lead
channel. The effect pedal, amp pedal and A-B box makes a neat little
semi-circle set up about 8 feet in front of, and somewhat to the side
of the amp. The Record Out went right into one channel of a small
Tascam board for 4-track recording and video sound feed. The Slave Out
went into the monitor board so the keyboard player, 20 feet across the
stage, could hear me. Having independent level controls made this all
work very well. For the tuner feed, I plugged a short cable into the
other Effects Send.
All I had to do to achieve the necessary volume was open the guitar
volume controls from my normal 5 to about 8. I left the channel masters
at 5 for R1, and 2 for the others. With the volume at 2 and
Pentode/Simul-Class/Harmonics/Full Power selected, I was more than loud
enough. The only change to my normal settings was to push in the R2
Pull Fat (since R2 got rather shredded from the higher guitar output)
and turn up the R1 Presence a little. I couldn't have been more
satisfied with the sound, and the amp never sounded like it was even
breathing hard. My only complaint is that the pedal LED's wash out in
sunlight, but that problem isn't unique to Boogie.
Over the last year, I've come to the conclusion that it was worth
paying the extra for separate pieces that weigh less than the combo
version. I can easily pack and unpack my car myself, where before I
always needed help getting the amp into the trunk and up and down
stairs. All three pieces plus the Totes bag I use for cables, pedals,
tuner, and all other accessories fit nicely into the trunk with room
left over for a couple of guitar stands. It takes a few extra minutes
to set up, but the lowered level of back strain is well worth it, and
the controls wind up at the right height for easy adjustment.
Danny W.
|
1853.40 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | What *is* it, Man? | Wed Jun 03 1992 08:36 | 5 |
|
Question on using the effect send for tune. Isn't the output from
the loop a little hot for the tuner? It seems like a good idea...
-pat
|
1853.41 | it hasn't exploded yet | RANGER::WEBER | | Thu Jun 04 1992 09:51 | 6 |
| >Isn't the output from the loop a little hot for the tuner?<
The Tuner (a TU-12) hasn't complained so far. Anyway, it sits over the
output tubes, so it's used to being hot.
Danny W.
|
1853.42 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | What *is* it, Man? | Thu Jun 04 1992 12:09 | 5 |
|
I just *knew* my loop was good for something. I also have a TU12,
gonna hook it up tonite.
-pat(man) - jammin' with the scarymon tonite
|
1853.43 | Mark IV | CSLALL::MCLEMENT | I live in a darken room | Fri Jun 05 1992 12:06 | 6 |
|
I run my Korg DT1 thou it with no problem........
Mcmark
|
1853.44 | me too | RAVEN1::BLAIR | What *is* it, Man? | Fri Jun 05 1992 12:25 | 6 |
|
Well, as of last night, I also feed my tuner from the send loop.
Works fine except the red lights are glowing twice as brightly.
Is that a problem?
;^)
|
1853.45 | yuk, yuk... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Ren, what's a Dalmation? | Fri Jun 05 1992 12:27 | 4 |
| >>Works fine except the red lights are glowing twice as brightly.
>>Is that a problem?
not if you wear shades 8^)
|
1853.46 | Expensive Studio .22 | RANGER::WEBER | | Tue Mar 23 1993 10:41 | 35 |
| When I bought my MK IV I felt I was paying for some features that I'd
never use, but most of them have turned out to be more useful than I'd
ever expected. I have been especially surprised by the power amp
controls.
I've always been a high-power-amplifier user. When I was young and
something of a Fender pack rat (I'll write a note about this some other
time), my favorite amps were the 4-6L6 models (Showman and Twin) and
I've generally preferred the sound of these amps to the smaller ones. I
had expected to always use my MK IV in Pentode/Simul/Full mode, and in
fact, for big gigs, I do like it that way.
At home, however, I've been leaving it set to Triode/Class A/Tweed mode
almost exclusively. This gives it a rich sound even at low levels, and
sounds especially good with solidbodies or Gretsch guitars. Some of my
archtops sound a little too rich this way; with those I switch back to
full power mode.
My standard settings for the Lead channel sounds terrible in this
mode, with too much distortion for my taste, so I tend to just use R1 &
R2 (I'm sure I could readjust Lead for a better sound, but I'm too
lazy.)
Does this mean I would have been happier using a Deluxe than a Twin all
those years? Doubtful--I was something of a clean freak then. But I am
surprised at how much I've enjoyed using the equivalent of a 15-watt
amplifier. As a bonus, the fan runs at low speed in Tweed power and is
barely audible in the house.
I do have to remember to turn the main volume down a little before
switching back--it's a nuisance to have to straighten all the pictures
on the walls if I don't.
Danny W.
|
1853.47 | Does it eat valves? | MVSUPP::CARRD | Dave Carr 845-2317 | Wed Mar 24 1993 03:42 | 19 |
| re: <<< Note 1853.46 by RANGER::WEBER >>>
Danny,
Have you had to change your 6L6 valves regularly using Full Power?
I have only ever used my Mark IV in "Tweed Power" mode, and I've never had
to change valves yet (in 2 years), apart from a preamp valve that went
microphonic.
I used the amp for about a year and a half with a band about one to two evenings
a week for 2-3 hours, and for the last 8 months for an hour or two on about 4
nights a week (in "Silent Recording" mode at home).
I've always found it loud enough in "Tweed Power" mode, but then again, I
do like a slightly dirty tone �^).
* Dave
(in Triode/Simul/Tweed mode)
|
1853.48 | | RANGER::WEBER | | Wed Mar 24 1993 08:04 | 8 |
| The tubes (or valves if you insist) have been in there since Sept.
1991.
"Class-A" uses only two output tubes, and this drops the power more
than I want for most gigs. I think I should
rotate them every once in awhile, but I haven't been.
Danny W.
|
1853.49 | Another MkIV 100,000 mile owner's report | LUNER::KELLYJ | Genuine '59 Coupe DeVille | Wed Mar 24 1993 08:21 | 4 |
| I've got more than 150 gigs on my MkIV, with no tube replacement yet.
I use it as a Class A amp about 90% of the time, and, like Danny W.,
have not rotated the tubes. I use another amp for rehearsal, so the
MkIV basically gets fired up only on the weekends.
|
1853.50 | Original equipment was good but replacements... | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Here all life abounds | Wed Mar 24 1993 09:11 | 11 |
| I went for an amazingly long time before I first had to change my
Boogie's tubes - something like 4-5 years.
Since then, it's been about once a year depending on usage. These days
I'm playing mostly keyboards with my two bands so it's been more than a
year.
Although last night, for the first time ever, I spent a whole practice
playing nothing but guitar. More coincidence than anything else.
db
|
1853.51 | Keys amp? | LUNER::KELLYJ | Genuine '59 Coupe DeVille | Wed Mar 24 1993 11:26 | 4 |
| db,
Do you play your keys through the Boogie (it's a IIc that you have,
correct)?
|
1853.52 | | POWDML::BUCKLEY | A Change of Seasons | Wed Mar 24 1993 11:38 | 10 |
| >db,
>
>Do you play your keys through the Boogie (it's a IIc that you have,
>correct)?
GROSS!! No way, I'd quit the band if he did that!
He jams his keyword mixer thru a Roland JC-120 ... sounds nice! He
only uses his boogie for guitar stuff, and since he almost never
plays guitar in our band, that's fine with me! 8^)
|
1853.53 | It all becomes clear now | GOES11::G_HOUSE | ThatsWhenIreachedForMyRevolver | Wed Mar 24 1993 11:54 | 3 |
| Guess now we know why Buck hates EVH so much...
gh
|
1853.54 | Rock n' roll bodybuilding | LUNER::KELLYJ | Genuine '59 Coupe DeVille | Wed Mar 24 1993 13:21 | 7 |
| Re the JC120: Oh, then he must not need any low end in his sound...
Hey, just kidding! It must be nice to have two cool amps to tote
around, but load-in bites! The reason I asked is that I've started
playing some piano in my band, using the MkIV and GSP21 processor, so I
was looking for hints about sound. BTW, hints about adding another amp
need not apply =8^)
|
1853.55 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | ThatsWhenIreachedForMyRevolver | Wed Mar 24 1993 15:07 | 2 |
| John, yer boogie has a highly distorted voicing, doesn't it?
;^)
|
1853.56 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Here all life abounds | Wed Mar 24 1993 17:55 | 32 |
| > It's a IIc that you have, correct?
No, mine is a IIB.
> Re the JC120: Oh, then he must not need any low end in his sound...
I know what you mean. The JC-120 definitely defies the conventional
wisdom for keyboard amp designs in having an open back and no
cross-over.
However, it seems to work fine (w. the right EQ).
I've tried keyboard amps but they don't sound appreciably better
and even aside from that, I find that I'd really miss the true
stereo chorus (which is a dramatic effect on the JC).
> The reason I asked is that I've started
> playing some piano in my band, using the MkIV and GSP21 processor, so I
> was looking for hints about sound. BTW, hints about adding another amp
> need not apply =8^)
I'd have to think that sounds awful. For one thing, guitar amps expect
instrument level inputs and keyboard amps expect line level inputs.
The JC-120 has both (labelled "high" and "low").
Sorry, but adding another amp, one with line level inputs, is
definitely the best advise.
One thing that might help in the interim is to get an impedance
converter.
db
|
1853.57 | No problems so far | LUNER::KELLYJ | Genuine '59 Coupe DeVille | Thu Mar 25 1993 06:15 | 11 |
| db,
My experience has been great as far as gain matching and presumably
impedance matching between the Roland U-20 ( sample player, no
sequencer ) and the MkIV: no distortion, just a nice fat signal. I
usually have volume on the U-20 set about 50-70%. I don't change any
settings on the amp when I switch from guitar to keys. I do select
another patch in the GSP-21, but the gain parameters in the patch are
similar to guitar or steel patches.
Just one of the mysteries of rock n' roll, I guess...
|
1853.58 | I have a U-220 - rack mount U-20 | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Here all life abounds | Thu Mar 25 1993 09:22 | 1 |
| Have you heard the U-20 thru anything else?
|
1853.59 | | KDX200::COOPER | Let The Light Surround You!! | Thu Mar 25 1993 09:40 | 4 |
| Waitasecondhere...lemme get this straight...
You play country music, and you have a GSP-21 ???
:-)
|
1853.60 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | ThatsWhenIreachedForMyRevolver | Thu Mar 25 1993 10:08 | 3 |
| ...and a Mesa/Boogie?
;^)
|
1853.61 | | KDX200::COOPER | Let The Light Surround You!! | Thu Mar 25 1993 11:28 | 2 |
| I can see a boogie being a cool amp for a country dood, but a GSP21??
Hmmm...
|
1853.62 | Rednecks Like Toys, Too | TECRUS::ROST | Louis Prima in a previous life | Thu Mar 25 1993 11:35 | 10 |
| Re: GSP
What, don't you guys listen to country radio? Nashville seems to be
right up with LA in terms of processed guitar sounds. These "new
country" artists wouldn't know the sound of a Tele into a Twin if it
bit 'em. The currently fashionable country guitar sounds remind me of
mid-70s LA country rock like the Eagles. You don't have to be a metal
head to be an MRP 8^) 8^)
Lester
|
1853.63 | | KDX200::COOPER | Let The Light Surround You!! | Thu Mar 25 1993 11:37 | 2 |
| I saw a guy on the Nashville Network with a JCM900 one night!
Yi!
|
1853.64 | | NEWOA::DALLISON | This space for rent | Thu Mar 25 1993 12:22 | 5 |
| Hey Coop,
Those GSP21's have to be good for *something*.
-tony (ex owner)
|
1853.65 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | ThatsWhenIreachedForMyRevolver | Thu Mar 25 1993 12:26 | 5 |
| Donno Bri, I still see lots of Twins & Peavey's on TNN. I watch it
pretty often. One thing I've seen a lot of lately are the TubeWorks
amps/preamps, maybe they're sponsoring some of the shows or something.
Greg
|
1853.66 | GSP21 presets? | AIMTEC::JOHNSON_R | | Thu Mar 25 1993 13:20 | 5 |
| Doesn't the GSP21 have a preset written by Albert Lee. I belive he
picks country.
RJ (love my country)
|
1853.67 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | ThatsWhenIreachedForMyRevolver | Thu Mar 25 1993 13:26 | 5 |
| > Doesn't the GSP21 have a preset written by Albert Lee. I belive he
> picks country.
Sure, but that doesn't mean he actually *uses* one of 'em...
|
1853.68 | Country anyway | AIMTEC::JOHNSON_R | | Thu Mar 25 1993 13:33 | 5 |
| True. But if he wrote the patch, figures it would be for his style
playing. In one of his instructional tapes he was using a lexicon.
GSP21 could provide SOME of the same functionality.
RJ
|
1853.69 | Enough Of This Already | TECRUS::ROST | Louis Prima in a previous life | Thu Mar 25 1993 13:37 | 17 |
| Re: .65
Good rathole, anyone want to start a country guitar note?
Sure, there's plenty of Peavey and Fender but you still see Marshall,
Boogie and plenty of racks if you keep your eyes peeled. Heck, I saw
*bluegrass* bands coming out of Nashville with Rane preamps and Yamaha
SPXes back in the late eighties. This was just to process their sound
before it went to the board!
Don't forget, gang, the classic Fender trinity of the Tele, Strat and
P-bass were designed to play country music. Country pickers like to
use all the same toys rockers do, just with more taste 8^) 8^)
Brian
P.S. The guitarist in my Cajun band uses a Twin Tube and a Rat pedal.
|
1853.70 | y'all..... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Send lawyers, guns, and money! | Fri Mar 26 1993 07:42 | 7 |
| Coop,
Watchin the Nashville network, eh? There's hope!
Did ya see Johnny Redneck and the Beer Drinkin' Truckers?
8^)
|
1853.71 | | KDX200::COOPER | Let The Light Surround You!! | Fri Mar 26 1993 07:55 | 4 |
| Hope? :-)
Actually - I don't mid OLD country (ya know, Hank Sr. and such)...
|
1853.72 | wrong note? | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Send lawyers, guns, and money! | Fri Mar 26 1993 08:15 | 5 |
| Coop,
How's CJ and the Coopette?
dawg
|
1853.73 | A Boogie with a southern twang... | LUNER::KELLYJ | Genuine '59 Coupe DeVille | Fri Mar 26 1993 11:48 | 29 |
| Yo, db -
Yup, I've played the U20 through a JC120, 'The Twin' TwinReverb, and an
Ashley intrument preamp driving a MidiVerb into a QSC1500a amp into a
Theile 15in box. The last rig sounded the best, but is not portable.
The JC120 sounded superb, but I prefer the MkIV for it's guitar sounds.
The Twin sounded about like the Boogie. I can't fit two amps in my
rig, so that settled it.
Yo, whoever questioned a Boogie+GSP21 for country music =8^) -
It's versatile: 3 channels. The clean sound is perfect for a classic
country lead guitar ala Albert Lee, Vince Gill, Ricky Skaggs,... The
crunchier channels are there for modern country, where you hear
distorted guitars all the time. It's small and can be loud as hell
when necessary. You can make the tone happen.
Off the main thread a little, I use the GSP21 in the FX loop to provide
patches for guitars, pedal steel and keys: typically reverb, some
delay, possibly compression, possibly chorus. No distortion. I could
probably do better with a dedicated FX box and reverb, but the GSP's
adequate.
Two things that irk me about the MkIV are the control knobs are not
recessed and therefore break ( I know, I know: I should have a
roadcase...so sue me ) and, secondly, there's no mix control on the FX
loop: the FX loop acts as a signal path insert so everything goes
through the loop. The GSP21 has a mix parameter and gain knobs, but
that's not quite the same. Might not bother other folks.
|
1853.74 | Yet another trick | RANGER::WEBER | | Fri Mar 11 1994 10:08 | 11 |
| I've added a footswitch to my setup to switch between Class-A and
Simul-class. This is pretty neat; for raunchy stuff, I use the
Triode/Class-A settings, but when I need more power/less distortion, I
switch in the Simul-class. I'm surprised it took me so long to get
around to doing it. The only problem is that the switch doesn't have an
indicator, so I have to guess which mode I'm in. One day I'll add an
LED, but even without one, it's a fun feature.
Danny W.
|