there is one at GC and I'm thinking about picking it up for $900.
thanks for your help. i just got back from trying it and it sounds frreakin awesome......i am thinking about off-loading my vintage modern to pay........i can't afford two amps, unfortunately
Mesa owners . . .
. . . what is the diff's between the Rectoverb, Single Recto and Dual Recto, except for the amount of rectifier tubes ?
Thanks
James
If I'm not mistaken, the short version is that the Rect-O-Verb is a Single Rectifier with reverb, and the Dual Rectifier is a Single Rectifier with an additional gain stage.
Love,
Keith
I thought it was:
Rect-o-verb = single rec with reverb 50w
dual recto = single rec with two rectifier tubes (can switch between tube or solid state) and 100w
triple recto = same as dual recto but with 150w
I thought it was something like that the main difference is betweeen the single red and the other two. Also I think before triple rectifiers there were dual channel dual recs not sure. But small changes can affect tone.I thought it was:
Rect-o-verb = single rec with reverb 50w
dual recto = single rec with two rectifier tubes (can switch between tube or solid state) and 100w
triple recto = same as dual recto but with 150w
the DR sounds a little fatter because you have the extra watts to push the low frequencies but the preamps on the Single and Dual are nearly identical. the DR can sound a little heavier when you're playing using higher gain, especially drop-tuning, but it's not night and day. both amps have the unmistakable Rectifier tone.
The Single Rec and Rectoverb are the same amp with the exception that the RV has a solid state reverb circuit worked in. the tones between the SR and RV are 99% the same - the addition of reverb doesn't really color the tone in that particular circuit design.
Thank you for the explanation !
So if someone is gonna play (all the time) in low tunings, say C-standard, it is 'better' to get the Dual Rec, to "help" those low end notes ?
James