Re: The Most Hearty EL84's
Thanks for the replies.
I'm really just looking for sturdier tubes with this thread. I have a whole other thread in which I *****ed about it and looked for answers, and I'm done. I've been over this with Mesa, and – long story short – I am "buying" their story for now, which is basically, "The amp checks out. Tubes today are ****. We are not very surprised this is happening. There are some thoughts within the company of moving to JJs." It was looked at twice by the manager/qualified tech of 20 years at the Mesa/Boogie shop. They've opened up the amp twice now, and gone through it point by point, while on the horn to the Mothership just to make sure. The last time, they left it on for days at a time, playing it hard to see if the problem showed up. It didn't...but I'm preparing for the next time.
It sounds like they are trying to take care of you. They probably ended up not being able to charge Mesa for any of their time but still chose to try and make things right.
There are a couple of guys out here that are pretty unscrupulous but Mesa keeps using them.
Get yourself some JJ's and save the Mesa tubes for warranty work. Don't forget the dampeners.
Hurricane,
Out of the thousands of amps I have worked on in the last 12 or so years, not one Mesa was ready for the trash. They are built like tanks. I do not agree with some of the directions that they choose, like having 27 ldr's in am amp with only 2 channels, but they really do build a fine product and I have done many gigs with no backup. Just keep a spare set of tubes on hand and you are ready to rock!
I have, however, seen many modern Fender and Marshall amps that were only a few years old and ready for that great amp graveyard in the sky. There is where the "Planned Obsolescence" lies. I have actually almost stopped working on amps completely due to the Marshall TSL and the Fender Blues/Hot Rod series of amps. There are a lot of them out here, the majority of them are breaking down, and they are all a pain in the ass to work on.
The flip side of that is that I worked on Mesa amp number 074 a few weeks ago. The owner had sent it to a Mesa tech on the Big Island to get rid of a squealing sound. The guy charged him $200, shipped it back with no packing materials and wondered why it was damaged in shipping. I had to straighten out the chassis, spot weld the end plate back on, and then figure out what the squealing was. The original problem was a bad preamp tube. I only charged the guy $120 for all of that, plus I showed him that the amp had reverb. The guy thinks I walk on water now, truth is, his amp is very easy to fix and maintain. Had he simply read his manual, he could have saved himself about $300.