I own one of these and have been looking for demos. Loved your video, man. Love this amp. Its definitely under the radar now a days. I have a 2x12 and it sounds awesome! Keep rocking
That's a pretty cool amp James. I know Metallica have always used these amps since Ride the Lightning. So if it's good enough for them it's good enough for me! Sounds great 🤘🏻🤘🏻
I bought one when they first came out. I dug it out last week and it still smells new. I suppose that is an indictment on its own. However, the Crunch mode is where the amp shines (From STP to Whole Lotta Love). Burn is great for a Santana vibe. Clean is nice...a little stiff compared to a Fender. All in all, if you play around with the knobs and stay in the "Classic Rock" era tone pallete, you can cover a lot of ground with the amp alone.
I own one of these and have been looking for demos. Loved your video, man. Love this amp. Its definitely under the radar now a days. I have a 2x12 and it sounds awesome! Keep rocking
They aren’t forgotten at all, The “plus” models sell within a day when they come up for sale.. the non “plus” aren’t all that great
That's a pretty cool amp James. I know Metallica have always used these amps since Ride the Lightning. So if it's good enough for them it's good enough for me! Sounds great 🤘🏻🤘🏻
metallica actually used marshall amps on Ride The Lightning, and mesa amps for every album after
@moonlight11511 Oh ok, my mistake. I read James Hetfield's book and I'm sure it said they started using them on Ride, maybe I remembered wrong
forgotten because it's not very good..i have one and i'm trying to sell it.. clean channel is great.. overdrive is garbage..
Interesting. What don't you like about the overdrive channel?
I bought one when they first came out. I dug it out last week and it still smells new. I suppose that is an indictment on its own. However, the Crunch mode is where the amp shines (From STP to Whole Lotta Love). Burn is great for a Santana vibe. Clean is nice...a little stiff compared to a Fender. All in all, if you play around with the knobs and stay in the "Classic Rock" era tone pallete, you can cover a lot of ground with the amp alone.