
thiswaythatway
Well-known member
Heritage Softail":sk1a780b said:danyeo":sk1a780b said:dgaemc2":sk1a780b said:Just a quick response to the 10, 45 & 90 watt power setting option questions.....
Yes, the channel power selection does make a significant difference in tone and feel of the amp because each setting (10, 45 & 90) offers a completely different power amp configuration.....each of which sound very different.
Basically, the MkV not only offers 3 completely independent channels....each with 3 different modes, but also each with 3 different power configurations.
Couple that with the added footswitchable GEQ, Reverb, Effects Loop and Solo Boost capabilities and the alternate option to bypass the Effects Loop, Master Volume and Solo Boost circuit altogether (which some prefer). By all means.....experiment with this amp!
If one can't find awesome sounds offered in the MkV for any musical style/application.....then clearly it isn't the right amp for them.
IMO the MkV offers incredible flexibility unmatched by any other amp I have ever played or owned, and I am able to achieve excellent tones for my needs in many modes and power settings of all 3 channels. My .02
But for all the different tones the V does, the few great tones a good IIC+ does sounded better to me than anything you can dial in on the V. Heck, I even prefer the IV and the III over the V. They sound more alive and raw and the V sounds a bit hollow and flat in comparison.
I was a doubter of the MKIIC hype until plugging in to one. It was downtown Atlanta at the Guitar center on a Saturday morning. Some guy in there, customer, was saying how he had one, blah blah and knew how to dial it in. I know 2 guys that work ther a bit. We ended up getting it dialed in for some molten metal and ended up taking turns jamming on it. Got loud enough to have to close the doors on the vintage gear roon the amp was in. We all were amazed by the real thing. Of course I bought it. The MKV is good. I bought one 2 years ago. Not hating. It just is not really close to the MKIIC in the higher gain settings. The IIC is a superb clean and edge of breakup amp as well. I think it is a better move to find a IIC which Mesa can modify to a true +, and spend just a little more money to get a truly epic amp.
I like Mesa. They seem to have come out with a good new amp in the Dyne. The mini Rec is a solid marketing move. But they have been smoking their own hype in some other areas. Kinda like a boss that can't tell the difference between real honest feedback and someone blowing smoke up their ass. Poor decisions get made. Several attempts at Brit type tones and the culmination of the Mark series is now an amp that models the old ones?
Oh yeah, and an owners manual for the V that calls MKIIC+ owners tone snobs that paid too much! Priceless! Gotta give that the marketing douche bag move of the decade.
There were a few of us who sold our IV's when the V came out like me and Chad and while we were initially excited, we both talked about the amp and admitted it wasn't what we thought it would be. So I knew it wasn't just me. After a few months of never getting it to sound as agressive as Mark III's and never getting the same feel I did from the IIC+'s I sold it.
Funny thing is, I much prefer the Electra Dyne by a mile over the V because throw a good OD pedal at it and you're done. No tweaking no modes, no BS, just a kickass tone with this bottom end whoomp that the V doesn't have. I still like the Mark series but next to other amps they always sound thin or hollow in comparison to me. Funny how Mesa went on their Brit high gain quest and I find their marketing fucking retarded, I think the best amps they make now are the Dyne and Royal Atlantic. Guess I just moved away from the Mark series.