V
vlammie
New member
Some background info; I was an early adaptor of Diezel, I bought a VH4 + 4x12 around 2000-2001, but sadly had to sell it living in an appartment for some years.
I' ve considered buying it back, but wanted to check out the newer offerings (back in the day, the VH4 and VH4S were the only models).
The schmidt intrigued me, and after reading some posts here the D-moll also, especially considering the price tag for the non-metal faceplate version.
Yesterday, I put the Schmidt and D-moll side to side using a mesa 4x12 with vintage 30's, both had KT77 power amp tubes.
I never heard a Herbert, but I know the VH4 pretty well (from memory), and also played a einstein 50 a while ago.
Schmidt:
very nice amp, sounds more 'wooly' than the other diezels, but I feel this one needs some volume to open up. Other diezels sound great even with the master volume pretty low, but the Schmidt doesn't have any.
Very useful reverb, better than others I heard (Fender, boogie). Also, lots of gain in ch3 for an amp aimed at blues and jazz payers.
I don't have a band, so for home playing cranking is not really the way to go.
But a very good amp, and I'm sure by switching the output valves and using different speakers it can sound excellent.
D-moll:
Ch1: wow! The most 3D, dynamic clean I ever heard from a Diezel. This channel alone is worth the price. Cranking the results still in a cleanish sound, at least with my singel-coil equipped guitar (a H.S. Anderson Mad Cat).
Ch2 and Ch3: very useful gain knob, when going from zero to 10 it sounds like more and more preamp tubes get activated, it has a very broad and useful range, which is pretty rare. Boosting the mids gives you the low-mid rooaar that I associate with the better marshalls, but a Marshall tone stack will cut the low end, while Diezels have plenty of oomph.
I liked setting the channels with the mid boosted, and using the mid-cut option to go back 'flat'. This way, it works as a reverse mid-boost.
So the D-moll it is, I actually like it better than my beloved VH4 (from memory).
I just wonder if the 2x12 rear-loaded oversize hempcone cabinet is the way to go?
I don't like the upper-mid spike of vintage 30's (same peak as a SM57 microphone for my ears).
Anyone who's playing a D-moll with this cab?
I play mostly clean and slighty distorted crunch, palm-mute tightness is no issue for me, I just want the best dynamic response to my picking, and an open sound.
I' ve considered buying it back, but wanted to check out the newer offerings (back in the day, the VH4 and VH4S were the only models).
The schmidt intrigued me, and after reading some posts here the D-moll also, especially considering the price tag for the non-metal faceplate version.
Yesterday, I put the Schmidt and D-moll side to side using a mesa 4x12 with vintage 30's, both had KT77 power amp tubes.
I never heard a Herbert, but I know the VH4 pretty well (from memory), and also played a einstein 50 a while ago.
Schmidt:
very nice amp, sounds more 'wooly' than the other diezels, but I feel this one needs some volume to open up. Other diezels sound great even with the master volume pretty low, but the Schmidt doesn't have any.
Very useful reverb, better than others I heard (Fender, boogie). Also, lots of gain in ch3 for an amp aimed at blues and jazz payers.

I don't have a band, so for home playing cranking is not really the way to go.
But a very good amp, and I'm sure by switching the output valves and using different speakers it can sound excellent.
D-moll:
Ch1: wow! The most 3D, dynamic clean I ever heard from a Diezel. This channel alone is worth the price. Cranking the results still in a cleanish sound, at least with my singel-coil equipped guitar (a H.S. Anderson Mad Cat).
Ch2 and Ch3: very useful gain knob, when going from zero to 10 it sounds like more and more preamp tubes get activated, it has a very broad and useful range, which is pretty rare. Boosting the mids gives you the low-mid rooaar that I associate with the better marshalls, but a Marshall tone stack will cut the low end, while Diezels have plenty of oomph.
I liked setting the channels with the mid boosted, and using the mid-cut option to go back 'flat'. This way, it works as a reverse mid-boost.
So the D-moll it is, I actually like it better than my beloved VH4 (from memory).
I just wonder if the 2x12 rear-loaded oversize hempcone cabinet is the way to go?
I don't like the upper-mid spike of vintage 30's (same peak as a SM57 microphone for my ears).
Anyone who's playing a D-moll with this cab?
I play mostly clean and slighty distorted crunch, palm-mute tightness is no issue for me, I just want the best dynamic response to my picking, and an open sound.