So, other than having no gain until it's cranked, what are the other drawbacks?
I'm thinking of using an attenuator with it. Now the amp maker does make a MV amp, but it sounds quite a bit thinner. I'm not sure if they allow MV installation on existing circuits.Marshalls have pretty hot preamps so they are pretty loud from the get go on the volume knobs. Fender amps on the other hand tend to have much cooler preamps sections. If you really want a plexi clone by all means get one, but keep an option for installing a master volume. You might find that the sweet spot (even if you are playing clean) is too loud for many gigs.
I'm thinking of using an attenuator with it. Now the amp maker does make a MV amp, but it sounds quite a bit thinner. I'm not sure if they allow MV installation on existing circuits.
attenuators are a imperfect solution. They start changing tone after attenuation more than about 6 or 7 db... which is like 2 or 3 notches on the volume knob. They are great if you need to take an edge off the volume. They suck if your trying to whack your amp on 10 and have the volume lower than your TV.
Also keep in mind that if you are running it hard all the time the tubes and everything will wear faster from heat and harder use.
You play stadiums then??
What amp are you playing.?I'm thinking of using an attenuator with it. Now the amp maker does make a MV amp, but it sounds quite a bit thinner. I'm not sure if they allow MV installation on existing circuits.
What amp are you playing.?
There seems to be A Lot of confusion about what a MV is.....it is just a Volume Pot, usually right at, and mostly right after the phase inverter. There is absolutely no reason it would make an amp "thin".....no more than the preamp volume pot would. I read that all the time, and wonder if it is not just repeated Internet "wisdom".
From your location (as mentioned in the post above) you should be talking to Nik at Ceriatone. His products will be better than most amps from Marshall, Blackstar, Vox, Fender, PV, etc etc. Plus.....he is right in your part of The World.
FWIW.....a master volume is really no big deal. If you turn it all the way up, it is basically out of the circuit. Sure, it adds a few inches of wire and another pot for the circuit to deal with, but The Whole Amp is built with that stuff.!
good luck
The decision is yours. Only YOU know what you want.But at their price, I could just get a 5153 and sell all my dirt pedals.
Fine...but that has nothing to do with the MV.Also, the builder stated that the MV and NMV amps are based on different models, and such the MV sounds a bit thinner. Though, I'll have to try for myself.