Re: Question about Mesa Rectifier series
the key to getting tone out of a 'recto', is pushing to rectifier tube.
I think you're talking about power tubes, not rectifier tubes. You don't "push" a rectifier tube in the same way as a preamp or power amp tube. The rectifier tube is completely out of the audio signal path, and performs a very different function than the other tubes.
The rectifier circuit, be it tube or solid state, is responsible for converting AC power from the wall into DC power for the power tubes. The main difference with tube rectifiers is they are slow to "catch up" when the power tubes suddenly need more power, which results in a temporary (measured in milliseconds) brown-out condition. This is what people are talking about when they say "rectifier sag". You notice it mostly when you hit the strings really hard, or you slam the front of the amp with an overdrive or boost of some kind. In practice, it has an effect similar to a compressor. Solid state rectifiers (diodes) are much more efficient and deliver constant power with no sag.
Whether or not a tube rectifier sags is not dependent on the wattage of the amp. It is dependent on what's coming into the amp.
the 50 watt 'single recto' will get you a lot closer to that soaked saturation.
... except the Single Rectifier doesn't have a tube rectifier: it's solid state only, so this kind of invalidates your idea of "pushing the rectifier tube".
Again, I think you're talking about power tubes. I also get the sense that you don't really know much about these amps.
name a dive bar that you can push a 'triple recto' in, and i'll play right-handed. all that horsepower is useless unless you are in Madison Square Garden, anyway.
Not necessarily. Mesa amps get most of their tone from the preamp. They have a hot preamp with tons of gain slamming a fairly cold power amp. That's where the Mesa tone comes from, and it's also why they tend to sound better at low volumes than, say, a Marshall of the same wattage. Metal guys, for example, love amps that get all their distortion from the preamp. They need a power amp with tons of headroom to keep things tight under high gain. The other benefit is that your clean channel stays clean even at high volume.
I've seen plenty of guys play clubs with Dual and Triple Recs. They weren't all that much louder than the guys with combo amps. The loudest guitarist I ever heard was playing a cranked blackface Super.
Remember, power rating has a lot more to do with clean headroom than it does volume. A 100W tube amp isn't much louder than a 50W tube amp, and a 50W tube amp isn't much louder than a 15W tube amp.
"Recto" has been become more of a fashion plate than a go-to option. more tubes; more chances for blown tubes. solid state rectification gets you louder anyway, if that is your goal.
Again, volume isn't always the goal with a high wattage amp. Besides, Dual and Triple Rectifiers have a switchable rectifier (either tube or solid state), so if someone wants the solid state rectifier, it's there.
A lot of touring pros rely on Recto amps. They're not a fashion accessory. Like all Mesas, they're built to be powerful, reliable pro-quality amps.
i got a '66 princeton w/ a recto (non-boogied... my tech refused on principle), and it's 18w. the recto is key for it's vintage tone, at a comfortable volume.
What do you mean "non-boogied"?
the mesa boogie rectos seem to have a high failure rate out of the box, also.
According to who?
Your post really gives me the impression that you've had very little experience with these amps. Since you seem to be getting what you want from an 18W Princeton, you're clearly not the target audience for them anyway.