Review : Mesa Stiletto Ace Head

phil_104

Cheesesteakologist
It is important to note than even though I have only had this amp for about a week now, I have spent a thorough amount of time with the amplifier, have had playing sessions with 5 other guitarists (some with 40+ years of experience, others touring musicians), and have drawn some conclusions about this amp. Please note that this is not a gospel, and I will try and keep this as objective as possible. Enjoy.


Features overview :
The Mesa Stiletto Ace head, it’s no secret, is based on the classic rock and hard rock staple amps that are Marshall amps. The Ace boldly steps into the playing field of brit flavoured rock amps, sporting a pair of EL34 power tubes. It also carries 5 12AX7 tubes, and a single 5U4 that serves as a selectable tube rectifier (we will get to that later).

On the front panel, it sports a few interesting options. Firstly, the power switch is in fact a three way switch, off being the middle position, left being “on” (operating at full 110v of power, for punch and an in-your-face sound), and to the right at ‘’spongy’’ (sag in the current, creating a more vintage, dynamic sound, to my ears at least). The front panel also sports, for each channel, the choice between diode and tube rectification. While diode offers an crisp, punchier attack that seems perfect for hard rock pounded chord changes, tube rectification adds articulation and sustain to single note passages, and a touch of vintage growl to classic rock rhythm sections.
It is a very strait forward 2 channel amp : the first being designated for cleaner tones, the second intended for overdrive. Each channel sports three modes. Channel one lets you select between Fat Clean, Tite Clean, and Crunch. Each channel is equipped with a gain knob, 3 band eq, presence control, and master volume.

Fat clean, to my ears offers a mellow, balanced clean tone, with exceptional headroom when used with the diode rectifier. Tite clean starts to introduce a little more attitude. When using the diode rectifier, you get that southern style spank, while tube rectification offers a bit of breakup and growl, perfect for dirty blues and slide play. Crunch, according to Mesa, is such an exceptional mode that they offer it as an option on both channels, to dial it in, in two different fashions. We agreed with Mesa, that this channel is exceptional, and provides a rich, organic crunch tone that sounds like your guitar, with some tube breakup, and not the other way around. This mode is perfect for classic rock.

Channel 2 offers another take on the crunch channel, with slightly more output from the gain knob. Tite Gain is the typical high gain mesa mode : it offers a great amount of grain, creating incredible amounts of sustain and raw power. Although it does not venture into Double Rect metal tones, it will deliver more than enough distortion to the average rock player, who will likely never turn the dial past 2-o-clock. This channel seems to work best, in my opinion, with diode rectification, producing a very modern rock distortion. Switch it to tube, and you get THE tone from Cream’s sunshine of your love, when the gain is at noon. The last mode is Fluid Drive, and offers the classic Mesa-and-PRS tone, specially with tube rectification, made famous by such players as Al Di Meola (who plays an ace), and Santana. As the name states, it is very fluid, very appropriate for single note solos that require sustain, articulation and definition.
The front panel also displays the only input jack, on top of a jack intended for the footswitch. The footswitch has 2 buttons ; 1 for channel selection and another for solo boost.

Also on the front plate, are the “solo” knob, and the “output” knob. To sidetrack a bit, the back of the amp sports an effects loop that can either be activated, or bypassed. When activated, the Solo and Output knobs on the front of the amp become operational. The solo boost does just what the name describes : providing a boost in volume when activated via the footswitch. The Output serves as a master volume over both channels. When both channels’ individual master volumes are set to be balance between one another, the output control can be used to rise or lower volumes on the entire amp, making it a breeze to adjust levels on stage, with a single knob.
The back panel features 2x8ohm output jacks, and 2x4ohm output jacks. It also features a designated slave out, with level control. As mentioned earlier, an effects loop is also available, and can be bypassed for studio work, sacrificing the solo and output knobs on the front panel. The effects loop also has a level knob.

The amp comes standard in a black tolex that resembles leather, with a gold metal front plate and small, understated Mesa logo at the front. The look is reminiscent of the late 50s-early 60s Marshall heads, giving this amp a very elegant look.
 
Re: Review : Mesa Stiletto Ace Head

Sound characteristics and amp personality :

It is very obvious that this amp is modeled after the British rock amps of the golden age of rock. Therefore, when asked to give a general description of what this amp sounds like, myself and my fellow players agreed to describe it as “ A Marshall, with more headroom, a ton more gain, more options all over, and a clearer, more cutting sound.” I am a fan of the Marshall sound, but all agreed that this amp essentially beats Marshall at its own game.
One thing the player must be aware of, is the potential bright nature of this amp. It is apply named Stiletto, as it is designed to cut through the mix. With that said, adjusting the highs on the amp is something that must be taken quite seriously, as they can get quite overwhelming. We played the amp into a Mesa Boogie 2x12 Rectifier Cab, loaded with celestion V30s, that are well broken in. This produced a very full, heavy and rich sound, with a sweet top end. It would be easy to see how the wrong speaker choice could make this amp sound shrill, and even thin.

Another important part of the sounds character is it’s tendency to be very transparent. Different guitars plugged into this amp wielded very different results. The character of the guitar really pushes through, something that can be good or bad depending on what is being plugged into it.
It also seemed to be very responsive to effects, specially in the Tite Gain mode, where it produces very vocal Wah tones, and resounding reverb coming from pedals.

Overall, the sound is typically classic rock brit, with more angry gain than your usual Marshall, and more switches to shape your tone.

Build Quality and customer service :

This section almost seems redundant. Mesa amps, in my experience with them, have been built like tanks, and are backed with a great team of support staff, that are both quick to respond, and honest in practice. I can buy Mesa products with confidence. I’ve had to deal with them once, for a broken footswitch, and within 4 days, I received a new footswitch, with complementary extra cable.

Overall impression :

After comparing it to other behemoths of rock music (various Marshalls, Orange Rockerverb 50, H&K Switchblade, and other Mesa amps), the Ace seems to separate itself from the back for it’s ease of use, it’s rich and authentic rock tone, and it’s reliability and rich features. Although it will not satisfy the heavy distortion needs of the heavier metal players, it will surely be the amp of choice for hard and vintage rockers.

Pros :
- Amazing rock tone with much flexibility (6 modes, rectifier selection, full or sag power control, bypass switch for the effects loops)
- Great tweakability, with plenty of options
- Solo boost is heaven sent, so is the output control for live situations
- Mesa construction
- Amazing clean headroom

Cons and shortcomings :
- Lack of built in reverb
- Even though there are 2 crunch modes, most players needs for a clean channel, and a high gain channel leaves this mode stranded between the two, leaving one of the better modes unused.
- Gain level might disappoint metal fans, although this amp was not designed for this purpose.

Anyways, I hope this gives any onlookers and idea of what this amp is about, and what it is capable of doing. It is not for everyone, but for those looking for a classic rock amp, and Marshall fans out there who would not look at Mesa amps, this might be an interesting piece to consider. It is more versatile than one would think, while retaining a strong brit inspired character, with a rich, organic, and classic sound, all in a package that is worthy of even the biggest stages.

Cheers,
Phil
 
Re: Review : Mesa Stiletto Ace Head

Great review! Vault worthy!

Thanks man. The reason I wanted to post this, is simply because I hear a lot of people asking ''How's this amp, it's not available in store anywhere he unless I put a deposit down, and the youtube clips suck!''. Mesa is one of those brands where stores will not always carry all of the line (specially here), so that is why I wanted to say a bit about it. I was actually going to start a ''Mesa Review Club'', calling on other Mesa owners to talk about their amps. It would help with questions about the different models, more specifically within the rectifier series.

Anyways, thanks for the props, glad you enjoyed it.
 
Re: Review : Mesa Stiletto Ace Head

two crunch modes - that's a plus.

for me a con is it's big as a house, but that's more a personal issue I have with halfstacks. want the mojo, but don't have the floor (aka closet) space.

you seem to hover around "classic rock" in descriptions, but the one I checked out was a thrash monster. rebuttal?
 
Re: Review : Mesa Stiletto Ace Head

two crunch modes - that's a plus.

for me a con is it's big as a house, but that's more a personal issue I have with halfstacks. want the mojo, but don't have the floor (aka closet) space.

you seem to hover around "classic rock" in descriptions, but the one I checked out was a thrash monster. rebuttal?

Two crunch modes is nice in theory, but as I have pointed out in the Cons and Shortcomings section, one of the bigger problems I have with this amp is that my need for a clean channel and high gain channel leave the crunch modes out of the mix.

The amp is quite versatile. It is modeled after a brit rock amp, and was designed for this purpose, but in typical mesa fashion, it goes beyond that. You could indeed get some great, near perfect trash tones out of it if you wanted. Just like it would make a great blues amp. The only limitation in terms of style is if you really want those fender cleans, or that triple rect distortion. For trash, it would be great, I just don't dial mine in that way, but it's capable.
 
Re: Review : Mesa Stiletto Ace Head

My rebuttal is that all the best thrash tones were played on classic rock amps cranked to bejesus and back and slammed in the front end with EMG's and overdrives.

Modern hi-gain amps are great but nothing sounds heavier than a 100-watt marshall stack that sounds like it's about to explode. Hence, the Mesa Stiletto :smokin:

That's why i love Mesa as a company. its like they take a classic design idea ("A Fender" or "A Vintage Marshall") then make it do FRICKIN EVERYTHING.
 
Re: Review : Mesa Stiletto Ace Head

My rebuttal is that all the best thrash tones were played on classic rock amps cranked to bejesus and back and slammed in the front end with EMG's and overdrives.

Modern hi-gain amps are great but nothing sounds heavier than a 100-watt marshall stack that sounds like it's about to explode. Hence, the Mesa Stiletto :smokin:

That's why i love Mesa as a company. its like they take a classic design idea ("A Fender" or "A Vintage Marshall") then make it do FRICKIN EVERYTHING.

I love the Stiletto also, but I think "all the best thrash tones" would include the most chased after thrash tone which was MoP, Mark IIC+....
 
Re: Review : Mesa Stiletto Ace Head

compare to electradyne for tone? ... obviously it is way more flexible and feature filled ... but as a basic tone engine ... similar? or not really at all?
 
Re: Review : Mesa Stiletto Ace Head

compare to electradyne for tone? ... obviously it is way more flexible and feature filled ... but as a basic tone engine ... similar? or not really at all?

Ratherdashing addressed this in the other thread, as he seems to have spent more time with electradyne than I have. He said :

I can answer this having played both (own the Stiletto, played the Electra Dyne at Mesa Hollywood).

They both have that Mesa feel to them, but that's about all they have in common IMO. The Dyne has a sweet, bubbly clean and thick, chewy high gain. The Stiletto's clean is chimey and its gain grinds and bites. Both amps sound fantastic, and they're good at different things.

I'm not really sure why they market the Dyne as "British style" because to my ear the Stiletto is that amp. I liken the Dyne to more of a hot-rodded blackface.
 
Re: Review : Mesa Stiletto Ace Head

thanks
i remember having checked back a few times on that thread then stopped - RD mustve posted after i stopped
cool - good to know
enjoy your sweet new amp
t4d
 
Re: Review : Mesa Stiletto Ace Head

Congratulations, sounds like my kind of amp. I use a Cornford Roadhouse which is in a similar field of 'amps that Marshall ought to be making' but it's a much simpler amp, single channel with boost. Even with only 6 controls I'm still pulling new sounds out of it nearly 2 years after I bought it. The thing that puts me off Boogies a bit is the sheer amount of tweakability - I'd be constantly worrying that I wasn't getting the best out of it.
 
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