Robert S. said:I've never played into a 50/50 but I'm sure they sound awesome, why wouldn't they?
The 2:90 and 50/50 don't have seperate power and stand by switches so you need to connect a cabnet to each output. Supposedly if you dont plug anything into the input and you zero the volume you can run without a load but I wouldn't recommend it. A sound guy set a mic stand behind on of my cabs at a show and unplugged the speaker wire from the speaker. It cooked the screen resisters on that channel.
The rule is, if you fire up an amp make sure it's connected to a speaker. The 2:90 and 50/50 are stereo, so you need 2 speakers.
Jeff, on the 50/50, does the low power switch cut the wattage to 15 wats per channel or 15 watts total?Jeff5 said:I use a Triaxis with a 50/50 and I can attest that it sounds awesome! I couldn't be happier. Soooo many different sounds to work with. Now I may upgrade to a 2/90 next year or even later as I know it has some different options and is what the tri was really made for. But its not really on the top of my priority list since I get a great sound right now. And I will say from a volume perspective the 50/50 is LOUD. I mean...insanely peel your face off loud. I run it really high, 7 or 8, as I want power tube distortion, but I have the pre-amp master and channel volumes very low. I can't turn the Tri-Axis pre-amp master above 2 or 3 with the 50/50 that high or it will blow me out of my basement hehe. Unfortunately I don't have any clips!
are you sure about the low power option? on the mesa site under manuals it says that the "lo power" switch reduces the wattage to 15 watts... and aobut the dummy load... what resistance of resistor and what watt rating?Robert S. said:The 50/50 has a 6L6/EL34 bias switch but it doesn't have a low power option.
An 8 ohm dummy load is not a speaker, it's a high watt resistor.