moshpit817
Member
Re: Lets talk about ALL Mesa Boogies. Come in and brag about you're please!!!
I have wanted one of those for a long time!
I have wanted one of those for a long time!
I use the F-50 head into a Marshall 1936 cab with WGS Vetran 30 speakers. I like the tone of the amp but it has the weirdest EQ i've ever seen on an amp...the Treble basically does noting as far as i can tell?
Not actually mine but I've been holding onto and playing a Mesa/Boogie Studio Caliber DC-2 for the last few weeks. If I didn't already have a 5150 2x12 Combo I'd be considering making this one mine. It's a versatile beast with plenty of power.
2 channels, 20 watts, 5 Pre-Amp and 2 EL84 Mesa Boogie Tubes. Sparkling Clean Channel and Lead which can be very Metal sounding or Super Smooth with use of the Contour Function. Tons of gain. Great tube amp sound. Built for the pros. Great for recording or personal use.
The Dual Caliber amps now offer independent gains, tones, and master volumes on each channel--plus, an overall MASTER OUTPUT LEVEL. The RHYTHM CHANNEL is said to be from the MARK IV; while the LEAD CHANNEL is based on the Dual Rectifier's LEAD CHANNEL design. The effects loop is now a parallel, rather than a series loop. A switch on the back panel offers the option of SILENT RECORDING, removing the speaker output for those late-nite sessions.
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Can see that big time! I own a .50 cal + head with the assignable graphic but without the grapic it would be a PITA to run!! I keep mine in the auto mode and set the graphic just for the crunch side and love mine.had a 50 cal. simple but nice tones. it was portable but to get the best tones you had to adjust the single tone stack every time you switched channels-this annoyed me and I sold it
I had a Mesa DC-5 that was a killer combo amp! The best part about the amp (to me at least) was the 5 way EQ–could totally transform the amp. Had a clean channel based off of a Mark series and the drive channel was based off of a Rectifer...awesome amp and highly underrated/valued IMO.
I've had a few mesa amps. My first was a 5:50 2x12 combo that I picked up for $200. It sounded great and I liked it, but I traded it after a few days because I didn't need it at the time. I actually traded it for the guitar pictured below.
Last year, I picked up a Stiletto Ace 1x12 combo. I'd wanted one since I played one in Guitar Center when I was like 15. The gain channel was great, but I wasn't in love with the clean channel. So I put it up for sale on CL, but someone offered me this. I couldn't refuse.
It's a early 80's Mark IIB - the extremely rare Coliseum version. 300w of all tube American fury. It's actually at the Mesa factory right now. Since it's at least 30 years old, I figured it was time to get it serviced. I had them replace everything that needed replacing, as well as all new tubes and the installation a reverb tank (my headshell was cut out for one, but it didn't come with one). They also modded it for me to make the clean channel a bit cleaner, which means I can push the lead channel more. Having a shared gain control can be a bit of a pain, but it sounds amazing when you hit it with a boost. This clip was recorded all on the dirty channel - it starts off with the guitar (PRS McCarty w/ Whole Lotta set, D standard) volume down, and I kick on a Green Rhino around :43 as well as turn the guitar up. IIRC the amp was on full power mode around 1.2 on the master. Still obnoxiously loud. I **** you not, gig volume on this thing is 1.8, 2 if you can be loud.
This thing is my baby and I'd hate to be in a position where I needed to sell it. Not just because it'd be a pain to sell because nobody needs a 300w amp, but because it's the best sounding Mesa I've ever played, and I've played a good amount of them.
180W is still pretty impressive