Carvin Legacy II review

UberMetalDood

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Well I picked it up around lunch time. My first look inside it revealed ElectroHarmonix EL34's and preamp tubes and a Mercury Magnetics transformer. The front looks nicer up close than in the pictures. There's a wire mesh over a wood plank covered in green tolex.

The layout is pretty handy but I wish there were indicator lights under the channel switching toggles. Instead they have little LED lights next to the volume control of each channel and it's not always easy to look at the amp and tell which channel you're on.

The head itself is relatively lighter and smaller than most standard sized heads. It has a 25/50/100 watt selector switch on the back panel.

It has a master volume control that works great. You can crank the channel volume for a nice saturation and still keep the volume at reasonable levels.

The clean channel is supple and warm, and has a tremendous amount of headroom. It's almost too easy to play, as if it lacks a little stiffness, but it doesn't. It very nice.

Channel 2 sounds exactly the same as channel 1 except with a subtle amount of gain. I didn't crank it at 100w to see how much breakup I could get, but pretty loud at 25w it broke up kind of like a Mesa Boogie clean channel.

With my OD, channel 2 was pretty sweet but it didn't get real saturated. You would still have to have a pretty heavy OD or distortion box to get enough gain for liquid soloing.

I have a love/hate thing with channel 3 so far, but I just got the amp several hours ago. One one hand, the clean channel is entirely supple and uncompressed, on the other hand, the lead channel is kind of transparent and very compressed as if a sheet is covering the speakers. It's not bad but reminds me of one of those Dumble clones.

My other complaint about the lead channel is the noise. It can't go past 6 without creating a lot of hum. Scoop the mids to try and get a metal sound and then it starts sounding like a blanket is covering the speakers. It's almost too smooth to do metal but the presence control does enough to pull out the metal edge. I think with some experimenting I can find a decent metal tone.

The good news is the lead channel has an incredible attack and you can pinch off harmonics all day long at relatively low gain. I think this amp has some limitations for playing metal without distortion pedals but it can do everything else incredibly well.

Playing lead on the Legacy II is amazing. In a way it's forgiving because it's so responsive but at the same time every nuance of your technique, good or bad, comes through. It rolls off notes in arpeggios from low to high and high to low with grace. Picked notes flutter and legato is liquid smooth.

I think the noise, compression and tone can be greatly improved with a new set of tubes. The Legacy II I played before getting this one was stocked with Groove Tubes. I guess it would be safe to assume that one way Carvin keeps the prices down is by loading them with cheap tubes.

Besides the tubes, everything else about this amp is particularly well built. They don't seem to skimp on using good components, including the Mercury Magnetics transformers, so I think the Legacy II is very high quality.

Overall this is such an amazing amp. I will be upgrading the tubes immediately as I think that's the only thing holding this amp back.

By the way, the gear I used was a 2x12 cab with Vintage 30's, a Fender American strat, and a Musicman Axis Super Sport with a JB/Jazz set.
 
Re: Carvin Legacy II review

Yes in fact I do. I play them every day, and both are still unmodified. Check out some more of my profile and research more of my old threads and let me know if you still have some more personal questions. However, if you don't mind being more tactful next time, shoot me a PM instead.
 
Re: Carvin Legacy II review

I have had the legacy I going on 4 years now its been my main gigger, and I can understand some of the thoughts you've mentioned. It is not a "metal" amp in the modern sense. If your looking for a metal tone, get yourself a good overdrive with a bass control (stay away from tubescreamers) and CRANK THAT ***** to minimum 4 on full 100w mode with the gain 6-7 .

I'm interested in how this amp is at lower volumes, as the legacy 1 is useless unless its rocking at least 1 or 2, and that is already frickin loud!
 
Re: Carvin Legacy II review

I have had the legacy I going on 4 years now its been my main gigger, and I can understand some of the thoughts you've mentioned. It is not a "metal" amp in the modern sense. If your looking for a metal tone, get yourself a good overdrive with a bass control (stay away from tubescreamers) and CRANK THAT ***** to minimum 4 on full 100w mode with the gain 6-7 .

I'm interested in how this amp is at lower volumes, as the legacy 1 is useless unless its rocking at least 1 or 2, and that is already frickin loud!

One thing that I really liked about the Legacy II when I tried it was that it's capable of getting incredible sounds at low volumes. There are definitely sweet spots, especially on the gain knob. I have to fiddle with it a little bit to get just the right amount of gain with my pedal without creating a lot of hum.

In 25w mode, channel 2 sounds sweet. I can play my strat all day on that channel.
 
Re: Carvin Legacy II review

great review! Its hard to find good Carvin reviews online. You mentioned not being able to get a good scooped metal sound out of it. I wouldnt expect it with this amp, although its nice when an amp suprises us.. Look forward to the next chapter... (toob swap)
 
Re: Carvin Legacy II review

great review! Its hard to find good Carvin reviews online. You mentioned not being able to get a good scooped metal sound out of it. I wouldnt expect it with this amp, although its nice when an amp suprises us.. Look forward to the next chapter... (toob swap)

Many of the reviews I read say that it's capable of a good metal sound but I haven't been able to find it yet. I don't have a heavy enough distortion pedal to take the amp to such dark places, and I don't imagine the lead channel is the one to do it. I suspect at this point that channel 2 would lend its self better to a metal sound provided you use a heavy metal pedal because the lead channel is kind of smooth and compressed already.

I don't know anything until I change tubes which I'm about to do. The Legacy II I tried before getting this one almost sounded like a different amp.
 
Re: Carvin Legacy II review

honestly, if your looking for a scooped metal tone. Just take it back and get something different. It doesnt sound like this is the amp for you. Tubes aren't going to change the character of the amp.
 
Re: Carvin Legacy II review

honestly, if your looking for a scooped metal tone. Just take it back and get something different. It doesnt sound like this is the amp for you. Tubes aren't going to change the character of the amp.

That would be obvious. I didn't get this amp for a metal sound. I got it for its versatility and lead tone. As I stated before, many reviewers claim the amp can get good metal sounds so I attempted to confirm that.
 
Re: Carvin Legacy II review

ahh. With a username like that and the fact that you kept mentioning it doing metal through me off. I see now.
 
Re: Carvin Legacy II review

Ok so anyway, the Legacy II can do metal fairly well even if it's not meant to be a metal amp. Try one out for yourself. It's a great amp.
 
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