Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

mrfunnyman

Member
Hopefully I'll have better luck with this thread than I did with my Bugera thread. Yesterday I was at a local music store when I saw a used Marshall MF350 Mode 4 head for$450 so I plugged in and played the amp for 45min, when I was done I was really impressed with the sound it was pumping out, the clean channel was awesome, the reverb was just as wet as my twin I had, and the gain channel was above and beyond any other marshall I've played or owned. So whats the skinny on this amp? I've been combing the web but I cant find no info on it I really dont want to buy this amp without knowing anything about it, can any of you marshall guys gimme some deep info and input on this beast.
 
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Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

It's a 400 watt transistor amp...designed for the nu-metal crowd, who were (and still are) mostly using 50 or 100-watt tube amps. The dude from System of a Down had an endorsement deal for it but every time i've seen them he was using what i think were JCM800's.

I could maybe see myself using one if i had a decent-sized tour (medium sized venues but not quite stadiums) and needed something cheap to power like four 4x12 cabs...but i'd still want an all-tube half stack in the mix just cuz i'm a tube dick :smokin:

You're probably the only person who's ever liked it. Tell your salesman you'll take it for $300 cash out the door and i bet he'd go for it...but if you can get to around a buck a watt i'd say you win...especiallly cuz it's such an oddball amp and it sounds good TO YOU...that's all that matters :smokin:
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

From http://www.premierguitar.com/Magazine/Issue/2008/Aug/Cool_Adventures_in_Hot_Places.aspx

When I first picked up a guitar at eight years old and awkwardly fumbled my way through the opening bars of the Peter Gunn Theme, I never expected to find myself performing in the Iraqi desert, covered in dirt and directly under the sun, beating down on everything at a blistering 120 degrees. But that’s exactly where I found myself, putting on a show for our troops during a USO show in Baghdad. It was also the first time I had plugged into a Marshall Mode Four amp.

When a backline company like Coaxial Events and Production is hired to provide gear for you for a performance, you never know what you’ll end up with for an amp – especially in the middle of a place like Kuwait. To prove this point, a number of years ago I was touring with a blue-eyed soul band in Italy. The Italian backline company we hired hooked me up with a two channel Ampeg amp. Channel 1 was clearly marked for guitar, but the second channel was marked for accordion! It also had a three position reverb – the first click was off, the second was Reverb 1 and the third was Reverb 2. It actually didn’t sound that bad, but the entire band got a good chuckle out of it. Having had that experience, I thought to myself, “What kind of Saudi knock-off piece of camel dung will I end up with on this trip?” You can imagine my relief when I saw that all-too-familiar Marshall logo waiting for me on the side of the stage.

Suleiman Arora (pronounced solo-man) from Coaxial Productions (coaxialkw.com) has accompanied me on all three tours that I’ve done with Toby Keith in Iraq. He’s the one who hipped me to the solid-state Marshall Mode Four amp. Personally I love tubes – the sound, the smell and the texture. I love tubes for all the same reasons that every guitarist on the planet does. They just sound better! But I realized when it’s hot enough to fry an egg on your speaker cabinet, the stability of solidstate might be the best way to go.

Shifting Gear
Marshall’s Mode Four delivers 350 watts of power,
but stays cool under stress.
It was a lesson that I had learned last year while we criss-crossed the South with Toby Keith. It was 102 degrees everyday; in Atlanta, my tube amps overheated halfway through the set. It was just as hot and even more humid the next night in Tampa, and to no one’s surprise, my amps overheated again. Knowing that we would have the same conditions for a third night in West Palm Beach, my guitar tech Sammy Bones and I rigged up an air conditioner unit and duct taped two dryer vents to it. We clipped the dryer vents to fans and pointed them at the back of my Kustom Coupe tube amps. It was as ghetto looking as it gets, but it kept the amps cool enough that they never shut down again. We still use that A/C system for outdoor shows whenever it’s over 90 degrees on stage.

But I digress – back to the situation in Iraq. Suleiman described the solid-state Mode Four to me as having “beast power,” so I wasn’t worried about it having enough volume. Now I just had to create my tone.

One thing I’ve learned from using Marshall amps over the years is that that they are generally too bright for my taste. As odd as it seems, the first thing I do while setting up my tone on a Marshall is turn the Treble knob to zero. I know, it’s absolute heresy, but that’s what I’ve found works for me – believe me, I would never do this with any other amp. From there I’ll dial in my bass and midrange, and lastly I’ll listen to how the amp responds in the room to decide if the treble needs to be increased or not. Additionally, on fly dates when I don’t have the luxury of playing through my regular rig I’ll carry a Roland GT-8 multi-effects processor to run my guitar through. I took the time to create a setting in it that matches my big rig tone for tone.

It’s always a great adventure getting to perform overseas. In the last seven years I’ve done six USO tours, covering Iraq, Afghanistan, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Macedonia, Kosovo and Scopjia. You never know what you’ll end up playing through. Sometimes you’ll find an amp you really love and other times you just have to get through the night in one piece. And you thought it was going to be all sunglasses and autographs!

Keep jammin’.


Rich Eckhardt
Rich Eckhardt is one of the most sought after guitarists in Nashville. His ability to cover multiple styles has put him on stage with singers ranging from Steven Tyler of Aerosmith to Shania Twain. Rich is currently playing lead guitar with Toby Keith. His album Soundcheck is available now, with another due this summer.
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

^ Lol that said absolutely nothing about the amp itself.


Mode 4 amps were a disaster as far as Marshall is concerned and the store probably wants to get rid of it. As said before, offer them a very little amount of money for it and they will probably take it.
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

Well, it mentions that it was good enough for a big name session guitar player, and that it performs well in hot ambient temperatures.
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

http://reviews.harmony-central.com/reviews/Guitar+Amp/product/Marshall/MF350/10/1

I really think it a is GOOD amp if you want to get a ball-park Nu-Metal sound.
And the metal scene is NOT flooded w them, so you might be able to get a unique tone from it, that very few have !
Worth a look, if you can get it for good money !

Other big names that used it , and might still be using it, is John 5, the bloke from System Of a Down, and that bloke who did a short stint in RHCP, that is now married to some BayWatch babe.



James
 
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Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

I'd say save your cash, you're better off getting something else. Even if you want solid state, I'd say randall or older valvestates are much better for what you're paying
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

I once had a chat with a certain amp-repairing forum brother at a Seymour meet-and-greet. Bro had, just two days earlier, gotten an emergency call from SOAD, who were appearing in town that night. The guitar player's #1 Marshall had crapped out; a new set of output tubes and a bias adjustment fixed it right up. 'Tweren't any Mode 4.
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

If you can choose between a Bugera and this, get a Bugera.
The Mode Four suffers from the same problem as as the AVT Valve preamp series....it sounds crap.
Only this time, it sounds crap with the loudness of 350 watts :laugh2:
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

The dude from System of a Down had an endorsement deal for it but every time i've seen them he was using what i think were JCM800's.
I've seen a live video where his tone was the thinnest plainist flatish and harsh (not in a too much high end way more in a digital clipping sounding way) tone which was far from JCM800's maybe then he was using the mode four. I;ve never played one but have also never heard anything good about them.
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

If you can choose between a Bugera and this, get a Bugera.
The Mode Four suffers from the same problem as as the AVT Valve preamp series....it sounds crap.
Only this time, it sounds crap with the loudness of 350 watts :laugh2:

Remember, sometimes you have to sounds BAD in order to sound GOOD !
Atari Teenage Riot . . . anyone ?

.............................................................


Any thoughts on the massive Fender MH-500 MetalHead ?

Atleast it LOOKS better than the Marshall ;)



James
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

^The Fender Metalhead is the like the Mode Four but manages to be even worse.
It's 500 watts of pure terror, and that isn't terror in a good way:laugh2:
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

^The Fender Metalhead is the like the Mode Four but manages to be even worse.
It's 500 watts of pure terror, and that isn't terror in a good way:laugh2:


So what you are say is, the SS amp with the least amount of wattage will make you suck the least - cause it is the quite'est ? :scratchch

Then what about a little AA battery-driven Pig Nose ?


James
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

^Can't say I'm a fan of Solid state clipping :laugh2:
FWIW the Metalhead has a top notch clean tone. As for the over drive/distortion channels, nothing usable there, you'd get better tones plugging a Boss GT-6 into the effects loop quite frankly.
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

y'know what else might sound good...instead of like a $1400 tube head, you could get 200 15-watt Fender Frontman combos. THAT'S power.
 
Re: Marshall mf3500 mode 4 head questions

A review on Harmony-Central said that it was terrible for opera and that throwing a pick on top of the amp broke it. :D

I'm kinda surprised they posted the review; the entire thing was a joke.
 
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