
Samhain
Banned
Well-known member

Gibson has bankrupted itself at least twice.
I have no confidence they won't do it again.
They tried something like that with JP2C. Great amp, but, not quite like the IIC+... too much stuff happening in that kit, IMHO.My guess is like stop doing the IIC+ mods for the Mark series and then in like a year do a “heritage” or “classic” series which has a flagship model in a IIC+ with all the goodies for like $4k+ new, fancy headshell, COA, etc etc etc - have Metallica & Petrucci play it and boom they’ll sell a shit ton. I’m honestly amazed that Mesa hasn’t done anything like that yet
Dude...read your own quote.Wrong again sold that over a year ago.
Stop the presses.
you need to replace the 2 big brown ones on the mark IVa board because its widely known that when they die, they emit a residue all over that part of the board that is difficult and time consuming to remove. Plus there is a whole fix to that spot that involves adding a small heat sink to that ic chip right near it, and rerouting a few components.I didn't think there was the same need to replace those that there is with the larger high voltage ones???
They will cause the market is going to keep declining ya know sort of like the demand for fly fishing rods. Lost artMy guess is like stop doing the IIC+ mods for the Mark series and then in like a year do a “heritage” or “classic” series which has a flagship model in a IIC+ with all the goodies for like $4k+ new, fancy headshell, COA, etc etc etc - have Metallica & Petrucci play it and boom they’ll sell a shit ton. I’m honestly amazed that Mesa hasn’t done anything like that yet
My Mark was squealing, feeding back and was just totally unplayable on channel 3. Sent it out to Mike and he spent over 3 hours replacing those caps and cleaning the board cause those leaked. There were parts that were so bad he had to reroute traces and solder them. Amp sounds better than ever but I wish I would have changed them earlier. Total mess.you need to replace the 2 big brown ones on the mark IVa board because its widely known that when they die, they emit a residue all over that part of the board that is difficult and time consuming to remove. Plus there is a whole fix to that spot that involves adding a small heat sink to that ic chip right near it, and rerouting a few components.
Wouldn't be surprised if Bendinelli has a junior grade tech pull the boards & put them back in for him and he just does the "surgery".I sent a Mark III into Mesa that needed a new preamp tube socket and some cap work beyond just those big electrolytics.
Mike said all together he had to spend 4 hours on the amp, and I assume most of that was pulling the board. Yikes.
Wouldn't be surprised if Bendinelli has a junior grade tech pull the boards & put them back in for him and he just does the "surgery".
My Mark was squealing, feeding back and was just totally unplayable on channel 3. Sent it out to Mike and he spent over 3 hours replacing those caps and cleaning the board cause those leaked. There were parts that were so bad he had to reroute traces and solder them. Amp sounds better than ever but I wish I would have changed them earlier. Total mess.
There was a thread here about them a while back. Mine were 25+ years old & Mesa had put out a PSA thru the grapevine about them exploding. And once they take a shit on a PCB its way more money & mess to fix.Agreed. Those two brown radials in the IV, they're not in the III. Any specifics about them? The 5 axials I swapped are
the same though and seem to be a standard for the older Marks.
Exploding is right! If you look you can see how the top of the caps have a cross-hatch relief cut in them to insure they blow upwards.There was a thread here about them a while back. Mine were 20+ years old & Mesa had put out a PSA thru the grapevine about them exploding.
I bought a used JP-2C I had to send in for repair and I figured I'd make it easier on everyone so I removedi hate shipping tube amps across the country it make me a nervous wreck to the point i just won't do it unless im selling something or have a roadcase and for my MK IV i didn't have a case.
This. Mesa has plenty of tubes to test run your amp with as they service it. I’ve always sent the chassis without tubes to them.Exploding is right! If you look you can see how the top of the caps have a cross-hatch relief cut in them to insure they blow upwards.
View attachment 74535
I bought a used JP-2C I had to send in for repair and I figured I'd make it easier on everyone so I removed
the amp chassis (and tubes) and then wrapped the entire thing in bubble wrap. My experience with amp damage in the
past has always been to the wood cabinet so I took that out of the equation. I didn't try it but I bet the wrapped chassis would
have bounced if dropped - I used THAT much bubble wrap!![]()
That sucks, a good tech should be able to work on it. You having four local techs and none will work on it sucks. I’ve played my IV for most of my playing days and have had to repair it twice; two different techs in two different states, both did it without complaint.![]()
Not quite.
I have 4 Engineers in town. My go to guys, known them for years.
Nobody would do a cap job here on my MK IV.
Matter of fact nobody would touch it with a 10 foot pole.
And i knew not a question of if but when it would need work.
I didn't want to "hafta" send it to Petaluma but that was my choice.
Plus i have other amps and traded the MK IV for a Les Paul.
Ive seen that amp sell 2 other times the last year.
It gets around. And MK IV prices keep going up.
As for Gibson i wouldn't let Gibson change a set of strings if someone paid me let alone farm out amp work.
As if the IIC+ wasn’t already one of the most coveted AND best amps ever made, now they will be next level!
Yes! Maybe I should have stated II-IV will probably rise, iv less so though. They are already on the rise.And my Red Stripe will move up a couple rungs now too!