Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
|
Page:
1 2
(Show 10 | 25 | 50 | 100 reviews per page)
|
Showing 1 -
100
of 200 reviews
|
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: USD 1,000 USED
Submitted 05/23/2009
at 01:42am
by feraledge
Features
:
9
This is a three channel, Dual Rec, so probably bought originally within the last 3-4 years from the dude I bought it off of last year.
I play death metal with a bit of crust and hardcore. This is one of the most versatile amps on the market with an amazing reputation, so it covers everything. I wish I had held out for a Triple Rec cause the extra 50 watts can come in handy, though I can run this through a single cab (Marshall 1960BV 412) with ample volume left. I don't really like to push the volume too far past 6 on all fronts.
I can't complain about the features, this amp has a ton of options, I just wish it had a bit more range, which I'll get to next.
But I'm assuming that if you're looking at this page you're familiar with the basics about this head and feel no need to go into detail about that.
Sound Quality
:
9
I have two 400 series ESP LTDs with active EMGs. The tone I go after is a modern death metal scooped sound with articulation but without mid chunk out. I've heard a lot of different sounds coming out of Mesas, but I think this is what it's best suited for. Want the mid heavy swedish death sound? Look at Peavey or Marshall, you can probably get it faster and cheaper that way.
As far as sound quality goes, it's hard to really judge this amp without bringing it up to volume. It's less like a 6505/5150 where you can judge fairly well at 1 or 2 how it'll sound up to 6 on the volume. This head changes pretty dramatically, especially on the low end (as is typically stated).
As great as the head can sound, I think it's a bit disappointing if you're going straight off the racks and I think that's something overlooked. The low end muds out, the mids can be chunky, and while it's certainly a high gain amp, I find the distortion lacking.
The sustain in general is weak. I got better harmonics off my previous head (6505+) with less effort despite less gain.
Out of the box, I'd give the sound quality a 7.
HOWEVER, this can be greatly improved. I have yet to have my amp modded, but am leaning towards at least getting an upgraded output transformer, if not upgrading the power transformer and choke as well. I've read this can be a massive improvement.
Also looking to get some new tubes. I bought this off craigslist and the person selling it claimed the tubes were months old. I doubted him then, and months later, I'm still doubting. But you can generally expect to buy this head used for around a grand and then have to get new tubes. I'm a 6L6 man though and that won't change.
That said, this is how I've gotten the head to sound ridiculously better: Ibanez Tube Screamer in the front and a BBE sonic maximizer in the effects loop. The TS gives the overdrive that you might think a Dual Rec would provide. Sustain issues are dealt with and you've got a few extra controls for feeling out the gain. I've seen people claim that you should be able to cut back the gain to 50-60% when you add a TS, but I prefer to keep the TS gain at 50% and the Rec gain at 65-70% (the pedal is unmodded for the time being).
The sonic maximizer can level out and widen the sound. That is it's job. If you use this, you can pull back the lows on the head and bring them back in a more balanced way with the sonic maximizer.
Those two things alone bring the sound quality from a 7 to a 9, easy. I think the modded head plus that would be a 10.
It does however get a bit noisy, but not as bad as a 6505. And until I get the cash up, switching to the clean channel is a lot cheaper than buying a noise reducer, but that's the more ideal route.
But, again, I want to warn folks who might think that buying the Mesa head guarantees the Mesa tone without mods or pedals. It capable of being far greater than what it is out of the box.
Reliability
:
8
Mesa's reputation is solid. Being able to switch from tubes to diodes makes the amp it's own back up in a way.
I've never had to call Mesa, but I can tell you the schematics aren't very enticing to the uninitiated.
But I do have a problem with the volume on the clean channel where it's about 40-60% reduced in volume compared to the other channels. The pot works as the volume increase is reflected, but there's something internal that I'm still working on figuring to replace to bring it up to speed.
This isn't horribly odd for a head, but for being a few years old it's a little unnerving. Especially on a head like this where it's far less likely that you bought it for the clean channel anyways...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for over a decade and a half and gigging nearly all of that time. I'm a bit of a gear nerd (though not able to toss a lot of money at it). I've gone through some Peaveys that I felt weren't quite as versatile and went the Mesa route. I was initially a bit disappointed, but realized that the potential is there, Mesa just expects you to fill it out.
I would definitely stick with Mesa even though I think there's some better 'out of the box' heads out there. It's really just super versatile and user friendly as long as you're not doing internal repairs. But knowing what this head is capable of doing and the sound that I'm getting out of it now, I love it. If Mesa had taken the time to put those few extra features into it, it'd be even better, but whatever, I've got it dialed now.
If I was buying it used I'd probably have it sent directly to one of the fine mod folks out there and just accept it as part of the cost. I'm sure they can do wonders for the head. But if you want a really articulate, high gain route, I think the TS and SM can instantly bring this up to speed.
There it is.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/14/2009
at 04:23am
by Andy Wild
Email: thewilddude<at>02 dot co dot uk
Features
:
8
This is the all tube 3 channel version of the dual rectifier, each channel has a number of different options, Channel 1 - 'Clean' & 'Pushed' Channel 2/3 - 'RAW', 'VINTAGE' & 'MODERN'. It is possible to get any type of tone you are looking for with this fantastic head, from jazz clean to brutal crunch - you just need to learn how to use it. The only area where the amp is lacking is reverb, however there is the rect o verb amp available. The amp has a superb effetcs loop, which I run a reverb or delay pedal(T rex Replica/Roommate) through to add the icing on the cake.
Sound Quality
:
9
This is one of the finest sounding amps of all time, in regards to some of the bad reviews below about the 'FIZZ' I just want to clear this up! It's not fizz, it's bright, the modern setting is extremley bright. Just think of all the amazing tones this amps distortion has created for bands such as Metallica, Alterbridge, Dream Theater and loads more. The distortion sounds a lot more tighter with an overdrive pedal in front of it, but that's just it. Do you think all of these bands plug ino it straight and achieve these amazing sounds!? they have lot's of other equipment to help them achieve this. The amp is quite quiet, use a noise suppressor if you are using an overdrive with the gain channels. The clean channel is sparkly, all you need to do to get super cleans at high volumes is to set he clean channel to your sound and then use the solo boost to set higher volume because this doesn't add gain.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I have never dealt with them, but heard great things about the guys at Mesa.
Overall Rating
:
9
The Mesa Boogie dual rectifier is a must have amp in my rig, It's at the top of the game for high end amps and as for the guy who said that the Peavey Triple xxx is better!? That is a cheap rip off of the Recto! you have clearly never played the amp and are jeolous. Congraulations to anyone who buys the Mesa Boogie Dual Recto and if you want any advice on it send me an email
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: USD 1000 USED
Submitted 03/04/2009
at 11:05pm
by Predator
Features
:
8
This thing has a decent amount of features. Three channels, each with at least two voicing options. Adjustable gain, volume, presence, bass, mid, and treble per channel. Parallel effects loop is awesome too. Clean channel and two distortions. You get the idea, its a basic three channel amp. Enough to satisfy most guitarists.
Sound Quality
:
4
Here it comes. This amp can sound good, and it can sound bad. Bottom line, THE FIZZ WILL NEVER GO AWAY. On the clean channel, its muddy, but it can be cleaned up. Mostly. The orange channel, the raw setting is useless and the vintage sounds "muffled". Orange modern is IMO the best sound on this amp. But still fuzzy. Red channel is to be avoided. The red modern is so harsh and fizzy it will be painful to listen to. Even cranked, the fizziness just hovers over everything. And the lead sound is terrible. Not liquid at ALL. You have to fight the amp to solo smoothly which is frustrating as all hell. Overall, it was quite disappointing. Not versatile at all.
Reliability
:
8
Very. Solid chassis, although the pots get loose easily.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with Mesa.
Overall Rating
:
5
Its a solid rhythm amplifier. Like i said, orange modern is pretty badass sounding for tight rhythm. But the lead is awful. It sounds like there's no gain even at max! It feels like there's just a bunch of fizziness surrounding a clean channel. Playing is nearly impossible on the lead sounds. Not the wisest purchase I've made. I'd say go for a Mesa Mark IV or an ENGL amplifier. Heck, anything else actually.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: USD 1599.00
Submitted 01/12/2009
at 09:16pm
by Drew
Features
:
8
This amp has everything you need from a 3 channel amp, a separate eq, gain, and presence knob for each channel. The only thing that sucks is that it has no built in reverb.
Sound Quality
:
9
OK, here's my story, I regretted buying this amp 5 months after I bought it because it just couldn't give me the type of tone that I was looking for. I was thinking of getting rid of it and search for a different amp. Out of manufacturing this amp sounds OK, with the 6L6 tubes that it comes with, but I just couldn't get the mids that I wanted out of this amp (without sounding like crap). The mids on this amp sounds naturally scooped if you ask me. The only thing that I really liked about it at that point was the thunderous lows that this amp will give you while playing hard and heavy rhythms, but it just didn't have the mids that I like for playing punk rock. I really didn't want to get rid of it unless there was no possible way that I could get good tone out of this thing so I did some research. After doing my research, I decided to change out the stock 6L6's it came with and went with JJ KT77 tubes...man, what a big difference! I totally found the tone I was looking for and I'm really happy about owning this amp now. The 6L6's just couldn't do it for me and the KT77's did the job. You can get mids like a marshall amp with these tubes. I use the KT77's in EL34 bias mode. I think that this amp sounds way better in EL34 mode whether your using EL34 tubes or KT77's(same tube family as EL34). With the KT77's, I could get the mids like EL34 tubes, and still have the thundering lows of 6L6's. Perfect tone for punk rock with monsterous and raunchy distortion. I am definitely glad that I didn't get rid of this amp. This is a definite keeper. I haven't tried using EL34's in it. Some day I'll try just for the heck of it. One good thing about this amp also is the fixed bias so you can change out tubes without having to set the bias. Just plug-in/out tubes and play. Now I've read lots of bad reviews about this amp about the sound and let me tell you, this amp does not sound bad at all with KT77 tubes. I am definitely happy about the sound that I got out of this amp. Another thing is that this amp doesn't have an eq like other amps. It really is sensitive to the kind of guitar you plug in. It seems to me so far that a certain eq setting for a certain guitar will not work for a different guitar. You will have to reset your settings. The eq setting for my schecter does not work for my gibson les paul. Two totally different eq settings, if you know what I mean. Overall, I'd like to say to people that have this amp now and are not happy with the sound, just try swapping tubes and try JJ KT77's or JJ E34L's. And it does make a difference in tone (in my ears at least). And if you're still not happy with what you get, then I don't know what else to tell you but to get rid of it and search for a new amp. This amp has more distortion than you'll ever need. I set mine just under 12'oclock position and it's perfect. This amps has to be played at high volumes if you're running 100 watts or else you just won't get a good tube tone. So if you want to play at lower volumes like in your bedroom then you should just run 50 watts. You could get a better tone out of the tubes at lower volumes. You could do this by removing the two center power tubes and one of the rectifier tubes. One last thing, I noticed about this amp that is different from other amps is that the louder the volume on this amp, the better it sounds. So it can handle jamming volumes very well. I've had other amps that would sound sound noisy and terrible at loud jamming volumes. This amp does the job. Oh yeah, when you first turn on the amp and the tubes are just warming up, the channel selector makes a popping sound the first time you switch channels but after the first time you switch channels, it doesn't make a popping sound anymore. It's not broken though, they're just known for doing that.
Reliability
:
10
Nothing has broken on me yet, but we'll see after a few years. I constantly play on it almost every other day and no troubles yet.
Customer Support
:
7
They're kinda slackers over there but they'll return your phone call if you leave them a message.
Overall Rating
:
9
Overall, If you're looking to buy this amp, just try it before you buy it. I had an experience with this amp like no other. I had to be really patient at mastering how to tweak good tones out of this amp.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: USD 1800.00
Submitted 10/10/2008
at 06:33pm
by Fruit
Features
:
No Opinion
Just a comment on Studpuppy's review below mine:
Again, this is THE amp that has defined modern Rock/Metal since the early 90's, with other amp manufacturers following suit. You could have at least admitted that perhaps the amp you tested had some issues, probably mostly related to bad tubes, or in some other way defective. Otherwise, it would have been better for you to simply say the amp isn't your particular style.
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Too many people have found this amp extraordinary for it to receive a Sound Rating of 1 from anyone.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/18/2008
at 06:11pm
by Fruit
Features
:
No Opinion
I had one in '03 and now have anothe in '08.
Sound Quality
:
9
They can be hot or miss. One day I love it, the next I don't. They have the "tube mistique", that's for sure. When they are brutal, they are the BREWTAWLZ by far. When not, well, I reach for a Marshall. For me the Recto' sound their best with Marshall 1960 Vintage cabs. I do NOT like the sound of Mesa's V30 cabs, Standard or Oversized, as they sound too girthy for me. Soloing on Mt. Everest is one thing, but fitting into a band context is another.
The Mesa Recto is a complete beast in every way. You can strech it to a Marshall tone, but in the end if you want a Marshall tone you should get a Marshall. The Mesa Rectifier, however, has clearly defined a complete generation of players.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Ford tough maybe?
Customer Support
:
10
Great. They don't take me out to lunch of course, but they always answer my emails.
Overall Rating
:
10
There are lots of great amp manufacturers out there today. But in the end it was Fender, Marshall and Mesa/Boogie who defined generations of Rock and Roll.
Whether I like this amp or not (which I do) is irrelevant. What I dig is that I now own another piece of Rock and Roll history. For that reason, I respect the Rectifier.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/24/2008
at 06:07pm
by Studpuppy
Features
:
5
Pleanty of features, unfortunately few of them doing anything to actually improve your sound.
Sound Quality
:
1
Are you kidding me? There was NOTHING I could do to get this turd to sound good. Why anyone would like the lifeless, dull, harsh sounds from this amp is beyond me. After changing out all of the tubes, calling Mesa, and trying other Mesa Boogies at my local guitar Center (they all sounded like crap) I sold this piece of dung and got myself a Peavey Triple XXX which blows this thing out of the water.
I wanted to like this thing.....I really did.
Honestly folks. Listen before you buy, or you will be disappointed.
Reliability
:
9
Seemed reliable enough. Very solidly built.
Customer Support
:
10
The Guys at Mesa were fantastic to work with.
Overall Rating
:
1
Honestly, I'm speechless. I dropped the green on this amp expecting it to deliver pristine Metal tones. Not only did it not deliver, I couldn't get a single tone from this amp that I could live with. I had a Mark III that I was unhappy with as well......you'd think I'd have learned my lesson from the first mistake.
What Mesa Boogie has is an incredible Marketing machine. They hype up their over-valued product line, and get guitarist to think that the only way to sound good is to drop $2K on their crap products.
You'd be better off buying a metal Zone and running it through a transistorized Crate Amp.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: USD 900.00 USED
Submitted 05/08/2008
at 04:53pm
by Brian
Features
:
10
This amp was bought at the end of last year from the first buyer. I'am the second owner. This amp is certainly versatile enough to do many styles of music. But it's gear toward rock to nu-metal. If you dial it correctly you can cover just about any style from Jazz, blues and etc. This is a 3 channel head with channel switching capabilities. I wish it had a reverb other than that...it has all the features for my needs. For me I don't use the effects loop. It's definitely a must feature to have especiallly if you're into pedals. I use this amp for home, rehearsals and gigs and it has more than enough power to handle anything you can throw at it..especially a hard hitting drummer. It's been the standard for many bands around the mid 90's to 2000 era I don't see it changing anytime soon as with Marshall. These two amp companies set the standard for recording and for stage performances.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use a Gibson Classic with JB/59 and ESP LTD EC-1000 w/JB/59. This combination along with my Mesa DR complements each other nicely. The amp is extremely quiet. Definitely a studio amp and why many bands have used it in their recordings. I run this amp with a Vertical recto 2x12 cab and it sounds fantastic and also an Avatar Vintage 2x12 with WGS Veteran 30's. The Avatar and DR sound incredible especially with the WGS speakers! I have to say that both are completely different sounding cabs. If you like a earlier break up with the Marshall tone the Avatar would be it since it's model after the enfamous bluesbreaker. The Mesa cab is very beefy with alot of braun. The sound of this amp is very clear, tight and focus. you need to watch the gain. It has a ton of usable gain that can make your amp a bit fuzzy sounding if you go crazy with it. The clean channel is great! Very warm and vibrant. Better than alot of high gain amps out there.
The thing that I did as with many tone freaks is changing the tubes, pickups,electronics and cables. For me I focused on tubes and pickups. I put all NOS preamp tubes in mind. I have Amperex for V1 and V5, Mullard for V2 and v3, Brimar for v4. I also switched the stock power tubes to Winged C 6l6 and it sounded alot better than the Chinese 6l6. It has alot of bass but certain frequencies on those tubes masked the amp making it sound like you have a blanket over the speakers. The Winged C 6l6 defintely gave it more of a 3D effect and the break up was smoother. Alot more balance than the chinese 6l6.
Reliability
:
10
I hardly ever hear people having problems with Mesa. They build great amps. The quality control, components and craftsmanship are fantastic from a production amplifier. I have no doubt this amp will last me for many years to come.
Customer Support
:
10
They are great! They get back to you and they care about their customers.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing for 13 years and have played and owned many amps. I currently owned a Laney VH100R and that amp is unbelievable. It's my No.1 and the Mesa DR is my No.2 I've owned other Laney's like the TT50H(great versatilitiy but the tone didn't impressed me as much as the VH100R, AOR Pro II(it's too classic rock sounding for my taste), LH50R(great amp for everything except heavey metal, I still missed that amp) Mesa Stiletto( great tone but a bit too lose for the chugga chugga) Stiletto Ace( a nice improvement over the Stiletto in the palm muting department but doesn't have the natural organic tone that the Stiletto has. Rivera K55....nice cleans and very loud but very peircing and muddied . Orange Rockerverb 50( a nice sounding amp. Cleans don't stay clean when you turn up the volume, the distortion sounded a bit compressed for my taste..not worth the price for the performance). Engl Thunder 50( nice for recording but doesn't cut through the mix very well in live situations...as with the RV50 also. Marshall 2210...great amp but clean channel sucks not to mention the distortion bleeds through the clean the louder you crank her up. Marshall 30th Anniversary(blue EL34) Very organic sounding multi channel Marshall but has some high end fizz that is very difficult to get rid of. Marshall DSL 50....Great Marshall amp! Has the best cleans of any Marshall and the distortion is nice! Marshalls best sounding multi channel amp. I like it better than the JVM. Carvin MTS....crap! Line 6...Crap. I love everything about the DR. It's a killer amp in almost everyway like my Laney VH100R. I would buy it again if I lost or if it gets stolen. I would certainly look for a good deal first. I don't buy my amps used for quite sometime and I think alot of people are the same way. If you look carefully and patient. You'll always find great deals on just about any amp out there. I'm not going to fork out 1800.00 on a new DR or amp for that matter.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 02/22/2008
at 06:08pm
by Nick
Email: njc<at>cloud9 dot net
Features
:
9
100W all tube amp. 3 channels, very versatile. FX loop, solo switch to give you a boost. Mine was made in 2006.
I'd like another FX loop. That way, I could use an EQ in one and actual effects in the other.
Sound Quality
:
10
Absolute CRAP!! I bought this amp about 6 months ago, and was extremely disappointed. I probably tweaked the settings for days trying to get something that sucked a little less. Then, about a month ago I bought something on a whim...a MXR M-108 EQ pedal.
After I learned how to use the EQ, I've been able to get any kind of sound I want. The distortion is absolutely brutal, similar to System of a Down's Toxicity album. A lot of people hate the clean on this thing (I did too), but after figuring out how to get a setting that worked on the EQ pedal, it's been excellent.
I'm only giving the sound a 10 because of what it CAN be. On its own, it would be a 2.
Reliability
:
10
No problems yet. Built like a tank.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't talked with them, but the 5 year warranty is good.
Overall Rating
:
10
I love this amp now. After learning how to use it, I would buy it again without even thinking. Loud as hell and sounds damn good.
My friend has a Peavey 6505 I've been playing around with. That too is a great amp, but this thing smokes it when trying to get a heavy scooped tone.
For anyone who has tried and hated this amp, give it another shot with EQs. I was very close to selling it and getting something better until I realized what it could do. Without Eqs, a POS like a Line 6 Spider sounds better.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: Pounds 1400
Submitted 02/07/2008
at 07:24am
by Steve
Features
:
9
Has three channels, etc. Others have already covered all this.
Some people may find this amp a tad basic compared to modern do everything amps, but personally for me it does more than enough, with a perfect mix of simplicity to gadgets. I love playing with knobs and buttons, but when gigging you don't want things to get too complex and fussy.
Suppose it would be nice to be able to mix in a more Marshal sound, but then it would be a Marshal Amp :) But maybe some sort of warm dial.. who knows. I'm very happy with it.
Sound Quality
:
10
Has three channels ;
1 clean
2 Dist
3 Very Dist.
Personally I was amazed at how lovely the clean channel is. Maybe could be a tad warmer, but still lovely. I find I don't use channel 2 much, too half and half for me, but bought this amp for channel 3... fantastic. But its all personal.
Reliability
:
9
Its been very reliable so far. Had it about a year now. I'm fussy about giving a 10 and a year isn't that long.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't needed them.
Overall Rating
:
9
Been playing about 20 years and had quite a lot of gear over that time. Personally I love this amp and would buy another if lost. The sound may be a tad personal so would probably recommend you hear it before buying.
Something that may be interesting is the cabinet type and volume. When played through a Mesa 4x12 this thing is awesome, but at low volumes in small cabs it obviously can't compare. What amp can ? But watch out for the weight of those large cabs... will put in A&E.
Not sure if its worth the money. For me yes, but maybe not for some. There is a lot of competition now.. some others are also very good.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/19/2007
at 07:14pm
by machine
Features
:
10
My MESA DR 3CH was made in 2005. I play rock/metal it suites just fine... i fool around with other musical style... blues, funk, trash, etc... u name it... mesa delivers... not the best clean sound... but.. then again... just Fender clean will smash this little beast... it has tones of features... just try them all, figure out what they do n u'll see these r all useful.. it has 100W ... believe me.. enough horse power!!!
Sound Quality
:
9
3 channels... 1 clean, 2 dirty... ch3 is has more muscle than ch2. ch2 is more bright.. and clean is just so sweet.. just use the EQ ;)
this baby has some heavy distortion... just turn it to modern sound (i prefer the vintage one...) and u can't go full gain!! its just so heavy.. :)
i own a Jackson soloist with emg 81/85. rhythm great.. solos awesome!
this Mesa can get very noisy using the FxLoop. u just have to figure out how to use the back controls for the FxLoop... and the noise will almost go away... add a noise gate and u'll be just fine...
Reliability
:
10
harder than a rock... built for life... i gig with no backup... just my Mesa DR.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
not yet... ;)
Overall Rating
:
9
before i had this amp i tried other amps... some can level with mesa... not many... i like Wizard, Marshall, Diezel, Carvin... but i chose Mesa... I've been playing with my Mesa for 2 years now... i would not change this amp...
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: USD 1599
Submitted 09/12/2007
at 04:21pm
by Paul M
Features
:
9
Made in 2003.
Excellent features. These has been covered. I gave it a 9 b/c of the lack of reverb. I use a Holy Grail verb through the loop - sounds good.
Plenty of power. Almost too much power, but sounds good at medium volumes.
Sound Quality
:
10
I've had this amp for a few years and have been waiting for the right time to review. Had a Marshall TSL beforehand. Recently I bought another TSL as a backup and decided to use it ata gig for a change of pace and a reference point. The TSL sounds great, but now I remember why I bought the Mesa in the first place. Much fuller, warmer, rounder sound. I can live with both - some guys are Mesa guys and some guys are Marshall guys. To me, they both sound great, are versatile and useful enough, and I like using both of them depending on my mood.
It was a little hard getting past the stereotype that this amp brings. It is much more than a nu-metal amp. I use the amp for classic rock (no Nu-Metal stuff, just 70's, 80's, & 90's bar rock stuff). I also put JJE34L's and the ECC803S's and what a difference from stock Mesa tubes. The amp retains the darker tonal color but can be lively when dialed in right. The new tubes made all the difference in the world. EL34's don't make this sound like a Marshall, but do brighten the sound a bit. Less 'sonic destruction' and a little more musical.
I use a Strat with a Duncan Pearly Gates 'bucker in the bridge position. Beatiful, smooth sound. I couldn;t be happier.
Channel 1:
Keep on clean, not pushed. Generally keep all controls at 12:00.
Channel 2:
Vintage Mode. Excellent classic rock sound. I play this channel mostly with gain around 11:00.
Channel 3:
Also Vintage Mode, mostly for my lead tone. I keep the settings the same as channel 2 but with a little more gain to help disguise my poor chops.
I mix and match cabs & speakers (both 2X12, 1 open back & 1 closed back). They have Vintage 30's, G12T-75's, or a combination of the two.
I also have it set to Rectifier mode and Bold. The amp is a little tighter this way than Spongy mode, but still has a nice, liquidy feel to it. great for single note riffing.
The thing about this amp is that I first found it difficult to dial in a good sound. Some nights it sounded great, others sounded terrible. Once I got used to the dynamic EQ and got used to the different rooms we work, I figured out how to get a consistent sound that I am very happy with (it only took a few years).
I only use a reverb pedal, otherwise, its a pure signal path. This is an extremely quiet amp for such a thick distorion.
So many times at a gig people approach me and say "I've never heard a Dual Rec sound like that. What have you done to it?" I realize I'm in the minority when I use a Strat and play classic & pop rock, but I LOVE the sound I get from this amp. Couldn't be happier these days. (BTW - Like the PRS, My Les Paul sounds KILLER through the amp, its just not right/practical for what we do as a band).
Reliability
:
10
Tank!!!!
I still bring a backup. Afterall, this is still an all-tube amp.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't needed them.
Overall Rating
:
10
Been playing for 25 years, mostly Marshalls.
I would replace this amp with a Mesa MarkIV. A little less 'recto' sounding and more versatile for what I need, but I still whole-heartedly recommend this amp.
I wish it had a power reduction feature or built-in attenuator. Using Spongy (lowers internal voltages) or pulling two tubes does not help the amp for lower volume applications.
Its funny reading the reviews here. I read all of them before I purchased. Of course, my ears were the ultimate judge, but I always find these reviews helpful. I think people either love this amp or hate it. All tastes are different. But I do know this: this amp needs patience, understanding, and tweaking. Unlike Marshalls which can be dialed in very easily, this amp is work. Sometimes too much work. But once it is understood, it is glorious.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/31/2007
at 11:21pm
by mesa
Features
:
9
This amp has everything that a rocker could ask for. The key is that you truly sit down and spend some time tweaking the sound on each channel. This thing costs a bunch, and its worth it, but you have to spend some time to get the sound your looking for.
Sound Quality
:
10
To those who would rate this amp with nothing but 1's, I suggest you pick up a nice little Fender, or maybe a cool Crate and feel good about yourself. So many millionaires have been made by the sound this amp puts out that it boggles the mind. Obviously you have an ax to grind, but your bitterness falls onto deaf ears. The 3 channels on this amp will give you any sound one could imagine. You can make a Mesa sound like a Marshall, but there is NO way you can make a Marshall sound like a Mesa. Enough said!
Reliability
:
10
I have owned a single Rec and now a Dual Rec. The single NEVER let me down, as I trust the dual never will. Built like tanks.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed to contact them. I don't misuse my equipment, so chances are I will never need them.
Overall Rating
:
9
I have been playing since 1969, so I'm no spring chicken, but I like my Mesa. I have spent a lifetime looking for the crunch Mesa has. If anyone tried to steal my amp my mixed-breed maniac mutt would have a chunk of his ass for dinner. So try...just try to relieve me of this tone monster...good luck!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: USD 1000 USED
Submitted 06/29/2007
at 12:28pm
by Paul
Features
:
10
100W head, made in 2006 (according to seller). 3 channels with different voicings (toggle) on each channel. Too many controls to count, but anyone reading this already knows that this is a professional amp with enough features for almost anyone.
From my experience, this amp can do absolutely anything. Granted, I bought it to play hard rock and it does that incredibly well (think Thrice, deftones, Norma Jean, Underoath). But it could just as easily be used for crystal clear cleans, soulful blues, country, death metal and anything you can throw at it.
There's plenty of power (too much really... i may pull tubes) to do almost anything. It's loud as hell.
Sound Quality
:
10
Each of the three channels built into this amp are practically an amp in their own right. Unlike many other amps I've played though, it has a Jekyll and Hyde quality to it from the switches on the back. Flipping the tubes from "Spongy" to "Bold" opens up a set of sounds that just don't exist anywhere.
First, the clean. It comes with two voicings, clean and pushed. In the clean setting with the treble and presence rolled up, it's crisp, clean and almost fenderish. Still, the low end comes through really well, so, it's not so much a fender twin sound. On the pushed setting, this thing is a beast. This is the rhythm channel to use for awesome bluesy rhythm. The gain control on this channel is very responsive and gives great saturation to the sound so it breaks up rather nicely. the clean channel sounds best with tube rectification switched on and with tubes set to "Spongy"
Channel 2 is all about tone. Left in the "Vintage" voicing there's nothing it can't do. Anything from Santana-esque sustain to Metallica and Slayer growl.
Channel 3 is a fire-breathing monster. The presence control is even hotter than Channel 2 and when set above 12:00 with Gain above 12:00 is the definitive modern hard rock sound. It's just unparalleled.
Reliability
:
10
never gig without a backup. never gig without spare tubes.
But i expect the amp to work for a while without problems.
Customer Support
:
10
I called them once before buying this to compare the triple rectifier head to the dual rec. I didn't reach them directly and was forced to leave a message. Their recording said "they call everyone back". I was pretty impressed when a bit later in the day a very knowledgeable guy from Mesa called me and answered all my questions.
Overall Rating
:
10
been playing about 10 years and this is the first "good" amp I've owned. If someone stole it, I'd be pissed. It would be immediately replaced with a clone paid for by insurance.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/05/2007
at 06:06pm
by Mario Ferron
Features
:
1
This is a 2006 made amp. It would be in fact versatile, except that it really sounds disgusting in ALL three channels. This is the second one I purchased (unfortunately). The first one I purchased used, so I thought it was too beat up for it to sound good. However, I purchased the second one new and it still blows. I tried putting in expensive NOS tubes in it, and it still blows. Then I changed the preamp tubes to more expensive NOS preamp tubes and it still blows. The effects loop went bad after a few weeks of use and sounds horrible. There is too much noise added (and I know for a fact that is not due to my pedals, which are top of the line and all have true bypass in them). I really wish it was cleaner. This amp is ONLY good for that non-sense nu-rock BS that modern bands are coming up with. There is no sound definition at all. It does have a lot of power, but every tiny bit that you bring up the volume, it will add loads of noise. This was a major waste of money.
Sound Quality
:
1
The sounds that come out of this thing very poor, toneless. The clean chanel totally blows, it doesnt even sound clean at all. The distortion is brutal, but it is not defined. My 5150 does a better job than that. My guitars are mostly custom made. I own a Jackson RR1 with EMG-KFK set in it, a gibson les paul studio with burstbuckers, a washburn idol, a fender strat with rio grande single coil set, and a custom made guitar with rio grande crunchbox and rio grande fat bastard pickups. All of the past guitars are awesome and beautifully set up. I used to have a ESP, but I sold it years ago. None of these guitars sounded good through a recto. In regards to noise, it blows!! is TOO NOISY!!.
Reliability
:
1
My footswitch cable went bad in the middle of a concert (they are really cheap and bad constructed). Few weeks after that my fooswicth stopped working (on the chanel buttons). I had to get it replaced. The effects loop in the amp stopped working after a while. Had to get it fixed. An input jack went bad so I had to get it fix as well. The pots are now all loose, so I tighten them up again. Its pathetic. Poor construction.
Customer Support
:
1
This is by far the worst feature of mesa. Their customer service is the worst. Is really hard to deal with them. They never took responsibility of fixing my amp. In addition, I have placed several orders from the store and they have taken up to two months to get my stuff. They are really cocky and disrespectful over the phone. Try calling and they will transfer you to an answering machine. Is sad, is pathetic.
Overall Rating
:
1
Mesa/Boogie blows!! dont spend your valuable money in this non-sense. Buy something else. There are many alternatives in the market that are better than mesa.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: USD 1800 USED
Submitted 02/19/2007
at 08:07am
by Matthew Watts
Email: matthew<dot>watts at t-online<dot>de
Features
:
10
I WAS a GAS (Gear Aquisition Syndrome) sufferer, until I got this amp!! This is one of the newer three channel versions. Plenty of headroom!! Loads of sounds available with the various modes (Clean/Pushed or Raw/Vintage/Modern) and with adequate control of prescence. This is clearly a more Rock/Metal amp. More difficult to attain a light crunch sound (other than in Ch1 one with pushed mode, but then you've got no clean!). I will keep this amp until one of us dies! I've sold all my rack gear, bought a few boss pedals and refound my love for guitar PLAYING and not just gear BUYING!
Sound Quality
:
10
I play a Ibanez RG570 with original Ibanez pickups and a Les Paul Standard (also original pick-ups).
The best channel is CH2 in Vintage mode. A really nice singing solo sound with a good audible level of pick attack. You wont find a modelling guitar amp that can match it (trust me, ive tried).
CH3 IS that Recto sound (everything from Foo Fighters to Metallica). Dont go looking for it somewhere else, BUY a Rectifier! Brutal Distortion but still musical!
CH1 is possibly the only drawback to this amp (but it still gets a 10). The new roadster and road king have adopted the Lonestar clean channel for a reason. The Rectifier is much more bassy and if not trimmed carefully, you can end up with a tinny sound or too muddy to cut through the mix. The right sound is in there (providing your using a Rectifier cabinet) but it's not a simple to find as the other channels.
One short note to the Roadster and Road King. There both great amps (with great prices!) but they pop when switching channels! Especially between channels 2 & 3 (regardless of volume setting). Mesa know about this but I havent heard of any recalls or modifications for this. Threrfore, if you've got a tight budget and want that Recto sound buy an original Rectifier. You can easily use an overdrive pedal to get that extra light crunch sound.
Reliability
:
10
Not had it long enough to say, but its built like a brick sh$thouse!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never spoke with them.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing for 26 years. Owned a lot of other Mesa/Marshall gear. I've been looking for "that Sound" for 3 years and I am sure that I have finally found it! Tried all the different Modelling gear (GT-Pro/GX700/PODXT etc) but it isn't real. Valve amps are not as forgiving as a solid state pre-amp. The solid state high High frequencies and dynamics are not as transparent. But if you master your picking technique then the sound achievable from a Valve (or tube) amp is truly Fantastic!! In the end its not the guitar, effects or amp that make the quality of sound, it's the quality of the player! :0) The Mesa Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head is the most flexible, dynamic and best value amp for the hobby and professional player.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: USD 1300
Submitted 02/08/2007
at 03:08pm
by vertking86
Features
:
9
I purchased my dual rec in 2002 and after taking it home and messing around with the settings for a while I got an amazing tone out of it. As you all probably already know it has three channels with different tone selection modes on each channel as well as seperate eq settings for each channel. I really enjoy the ability to swap out the rectifier tubes without having to rebias anything. Also the raw power of this amp is amazing. At times it almost feels like too much for certain settings. It has a versatile effects loops but I have never used it because it doesn't fit my playing style or needs. To be honest I wish I had just gotten the 2 channel because I rarely ever use two channels much less 3. But alas that is all they had in stock and I was inpatient. It is a great sounding amp if you are looking for high gain.
Sound Quality
:
9
As stated above this ap sounds great for any metal, hardcore or rock high gain sound you are going after. The clean channel sounds a little to thin for my taste but I hardly ever use the thing. On the positive side tho as long as the gain isn't really high on the clean channel the sound wond distort even at high volumes. I have been playing guitar for 6 or 7 years and always played through a gibson les paul standard. I think that the two complimented very well for the genre of music I play. I am in a post hardcore/hard rock band and this amp meets all my needs. Our other guitar player is running a gibson sg through an orange otr 120 head and orange cab and the two amps really sound great together.
Reliability
:
10
I've been in a nationaly touring band for the past 4 years and have taken this head on the road with me for long periods of time with no backup and never had any problems. In fact our manager at the time dropped it from about 5 feet onto cement and other then some dings nothing was wrong with it. I've never had any tube or fuse problems because I regulary clean and take care of it. I would trust this amp to last me on the road without a backup. It has done just that for years and I bet it will for many more.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I've never had to deal with this. I've heard good things though.
Overall Rating
:
10
All in all I really love this amp. Its not for every style and every player. It is made to be loud and sound great with high gain settings. Recently I switched to synth in our band because I've been programming and playing them for much longer than guitar and we have a new guitarist who uses my mesa rig. If it were broke or stolen I would make him help me buy another one. Maybe this time though only the 2 channel because this amp has more than I need. I would also think about buying an orange because I love their tone. When compared to marshalls though this head kills them hands down. Try it out before you buy one because it might not be what u need. Make sure u run it through a good cabinet and have the volume turned up because otherwise it doesn't showcase the sound it can create properly.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: CDN 2,000
Submitted 01/11/2007
at 07:57pm
by Matt
Features
:
9
This amp was made in 2005
I play thrash metal, hard, fast heavy and brutally distorted, but I also play blues for fun. For the metal the amp is unparalleled, tyhe best money can buy, for blues it's a different story, I can still get that deep tube tone for blues, but not quite like the amazing tone of say eric clapton. but then again, it's a metal amp NOT a blues amp, with a few effects it can get a really amazing blues sound. It obviously has 3 channels, 2 different modes for the first, and 3 different modes for the second 2. an effects loop, a preamp out, a rectifier selector switch and a few other need doodads.
I use to play in a band and did a buncha show with the amp and it excelled, the amount of power this amp has is unbelievable.
The one feature I wish it had come with is a headphone jack, but I can't complain because you could never get the amazing tone you get out of a 4x12, through headphones. I give it a nine for the lack of headphones.
Sound Quality
:
10
For an amp that isn't supposed to be a 'jack of all trades' the dual rectifier does a wide variety of sounds. the clean channel isn't anything to call home about but it's still a great sounding versitile channel that doesn't get distorted at high volumes.
The distortion is amazing, at high volumes the tone just melts out of the tubes and pools at your feet. I can not begin to describe how amazing this thing sounds. I use the 2nd channel on the modern mode. the 3rd channel is too bright for me. but be warned, it is not an amp that will have your dream tone programmed into it out of the box, you need to sit down with it and really get the feel of the amp, read the manual. Too really understand the EQ I had to sit down, read the manual and find out where each EQ fits in the circuitry, for example, the treble knob is at the front of the circuitry, therefore the treble knob will have more of an effect on your tone overall than say your presence knob.
Through the amp I play a Dean ML-X with an EMG-81 in the bridge and 60 in the neck, my guitar is best suited for metal, as is the amp.
The amp is quite noisy, but nothing a Noise gate doesn't fix easily. I give it a 10 because it is Not a one trick pony by anymeans, it is a versitile amp that sounds mind blowing for the music I play
Reliability
:
10
I've had the amp for a year now, played a bunch of gigs with it, bashed it around, dropped it etc etc, and it has only ever had one problem. the problem it had was my drummer set up the amp before I arrived, and he plugged the speaker cab through the slave out, there was no load and therefor blew the fuse and a tube, that could be under the neglect catagory.
The lesson kids, let drummers stick with there acoustic drums.
Despite the one problem I'm still giving this amp a 10, because the failure wasn't because of the workmanship, it was because of improper use.
Customer Support
:
10
As stated above I blew the tube, I took it to an authorized mesa repair shop (Ho's Electronics in Vancouver, BC) and he fixed it under warrenty. In vancouver Ho has been refered to as 'Dr Ho' because he performs amazing surgeries on guitar amps, and he's a really nice guy to boot.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing 8 years now and I love this amp
before it I owned a Line 6 spider 112 combo, and although satisfied with the spider, I needed to upgrade to a more proffessional amplifier.
If this amp was lost or stolen I would easily buy a new one, although I am curious about the Mesa Mark IV, but I don't think anything can come close to touching this, except maybe the triple rectifer but thats just obserd.
This is not a practice amp that sounds great at low volumes. It needs be cranked, it's like a lambourghini, the full potential isn't met until it's taken out on the road and opened up.
again, it's not a one trick pony, but it's also not a 'jack of all trades but a master of none'. it's a well rounded versitile amp that sounds INCREDIBLE for metal.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: USD 1,699
Submitted 11/29/2006
at 02:59am
by TR
Features
:
10
First off, this amp is extremely versatile. It has all the features you could ever need, 3 channels, 8 modes and the best effects loop I've seen... Sure, some people might even say it's "too much!" Those are the people that shouldn't buy one! :) Anyways, like said this amp is very versaltile... It can cover just about any style of music but it excells in the area of hard rock!
Sound Quality
:
9
I mainly use 2 PRS Singlecut's with #7 pickups, and a PRS custom 24 with HFS pickups live. I play modern hard rock and the combination between my guitars and this amp are perfect for my style. As far as my effects are concerned I use a TC Electronics Chorus/Flanger, a Boss Phaser, Boss Delay, Boss Reverb and a BBE Sonic Maximizer (rack mount) through the effects loop. I also use a Morley Power Wah and a Boss Acoustic Simulator wich run straight in after my guitar (I like to have options) I run the amp through (2) Mesa/Boogie 4x12 Recto Cabs... I also have this baby stocked with EL34 power tubes rather than the 6L6's. Mainly it tightens the low end and gives the amp more of a touch sensative feel. It's really a matter of opinion on what kind of tubes you use and it also has alot to with your playing style. I suggest you try the amp with both kinds of power tubes before you settle. Anyways here's my take on the sound:
CHANNEL 1
I leave this channel set on clean mode... I get a good clean sound out of this amp. It's not the best I've ever heard but it sounds good! So as long as you don't have your gain set too high like an idiot, it wont distort. Not even at high volumes!!
CHANNEL 2
I leave this channel set on vintage mode... I keep the presence only about a quarter of the way up and I do not "scoop" the mid, I keep it about half way up. It produces a dark creamy sound covered with sustain. I mainly use it for slower-phrased soloing, as well as for slow-less aggressive rhythms... All in all this channel kicks ass!!
CHANNEL 3
I leave this channel set on modern mode... This is the channel I depend on the most! I keep my gain alittle over half way up, my presence about half way up and it produces a crunch that is too sweet to describe... I use it as my main rhythm and with one step of the solo boost it also becomes my main lead channel as well (quick scale runs & sweep picking sound superb!!)
Just remember how important the PRESENCE nob is when you first go to tweak it... If you don't know how to properly set your presence your going to sound like shit! Also, don't use a shitty cab or a shitty guitar with this amp because it'll show through!! I give this amp a 9 on sound quality mainly because there are alot of high gain amps with better clean channels...
Reliability
:
10
Never had a problem...
Customer Support
:
10
Mesa/Boogie is a very good company that takes pride in there amps... They will help you anyway they can!
Overall Rating
:
9
I'm 22, I've been playing for 10 years. I'm a full time musician and the band I play for is currently touring on a national level. So as you can imagine I've owned and played many amps. I use a Dual Rectifier because it sounds good, it's built tough, and most of all it's versatile. I own a total of 2 Dual Rectifiers... I would be lieing if I said that this was the best high gain amp I've ever played through... There are indeed a few that I think sound better but they all cost over $4,000 and aren't very road worthy or versatile... So I think if the amp suites your playing and/or genre then it's the best amp you can find for the quality and price. Go for it!! If either were stolen I'd get a new one :)
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: USD 1,699
Submitted 11/29/2006
at 02:54am
by TR
Features
:
10
First off, this amp is extremely versatile. It has all the features you could ever need, 3 channels, 8 modes and the best effects loop I've seen... Sure, some people might even say it's "too much!" Those are the people that shouldn't buy one! :) Anyways, like said this amp is very versaltile... It can cover just about any style of music but it excells in the area of hard rock!
Sound Quality
:
9
I have mainly use 2 PRS Singlecut's with #7 pickups, and a PRS custom 24 with HFS pickups live. I play modern hard rock and the combination between my guitars and this amp are perfect for my style. As far as my effects are concerned I use a TC Electronics Chorus/Flanger, a Boss Phaser, Boss Delay, Boss Reverb and a BBE Sonic Maximizer (rack mount) through the effects loop. I also use a Morley Power Wah and a Boss Acoustic Simulator wich run straight in after my guitar (I like to have options) I run the amp through (2) Mesa/Boogie 4x12 Recto Cabs... I also have this baby stocked with EL34 power tubes rather than the 6L6's. Mainly it tightens the low end and gives the amp more of a touch sensative feel. It's really a matter of opinion on what kind of tubes you use and it also has alot to with your playing style. I suggest you try the amp with both kinds of power tubes before you settle. Anyways here's my take on the sound:
CHANNEL 1
I leave this channel set on clean mode... I get a good clean sound of this amp. It's not the best I've ever heard but it sounds good! So as long as you don't have your gain set too high like an idiot, it wont distort. Not even at high volumes!!
CHANNEL 2
I leave this channel set on vintage mode... I keep the presence only about a quarter of the way up and I do not "scoop" the mid, I keep it about half way up. It produces a dark creamy sound covered with sustain. I mainly use it for slower-phrased soloing, as well as for slow-less aggressive rhythms... All in all this channel kicks ass!!
CHANNEL 3
I leave this channel set on modern mode... This is the channel I depend on the most! I keep my gain alittle over half way up, my presence about half way up and it produces a crunch that is too sweet to describe... I use it as my main rhythm and with one step of the solo boost it also becomes my main lead channel as well (quick scale runs & sweep picking sound superb!!)
Just remember how important the PRESENCE nob is when you first go to tweak it... If you don't know how to properly set your presence your going to sound like shit! Also, don't use a shitty cab or a shitty guitar with this amp because it'll show through!! I give this amp a 9 on sound quality mainly because there are alot of high gain amps with better clean channels...
Reliability
:
10
Never had a problem...
Customer Support
:
10
Mesa/Boogie is a very good company that takes pride in there amps... They will help you anyway they can!
Overall Rating
:
9
I'm 22, I've been playing for 10 years. I'm a full time musician and the band I play for is currently touring on a national level. So as you can imagine I've owned and played many amps. I use a Dual Rectifier because it sounds good, it's built tough, and most of all it's versatile. I own a total of 2 Dual Rectifiers... I would be lieing if I said that this was the best high gain amp I've ever played through... There are indeed a few that I think sound better but they all cost over $4,000 and aren't very road worthy or versatile... So I think if the amp suites your playing and/or genre then it's the best amp you can find for the quality and price. Go for it!! If either were stolen I'd get a new one :)
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 11/14/2006
at 03:32pm
by Ben
Features
:
9
There is more on this amp than you will know what to do with. You can research Mesa for all the features. I have never felt that I needed more control or options than this amp provides. Amazing versitility. It's all there, and then some. TONS of tonal options. Full controls for whatever rig you can dream up.
Big bonus:
This head I like better than the Triple Rec because you can cut the power from 100watt to 50watt by removing two tubes for more tone options when the tubes are pushed harder. Plenty, believe me, PLENTY of power here.
No reverb or other effects, so it gets a 9. 9.5 if I could.
Sound Quality
:
10
Amazing....simply amazing. Short of sparkly cleans, this amp will do it ALL. So many controls for tone that you seriously have 10 amps in one, and the cool thing is you've got 3 channels so you can footswitch between three different tones, volume boost, and your FX loop. A few tones I've dialed up with great delight are Vox, Marshall, Orange type stuff.
With enough nob tweaking, your sound is in there no matter what you want. And it will sound very, very good. Warm or thin, course or smooth, tight and punchy or breathy and natural, whatever. It's all there. Obviously you'll want to get a guitar/pickups that will give you the other half of the picture.
On top of all that, what this amp does that no other will do is a very tight and course roar with alot of bite. HUGE is the best description. Large and mean.
Reliability
:
8
4 years, no trouble. Get's played about 4 hrs/week. Alot of gigs and transporting. Take care of it and you'll be alright. All tubes are inherently prone to go out though.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
no need.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been on guitar for about 10 yrs. I play a Gibson SG with seymor duncan humbuckers and a Squier Stratocaster (all single coil) and get some really good rock tones. It has never let me down when I've reached for all kinds of tones and rig setups. In the end, it'll do the sound of any other amp, but no other amp can sound like this one.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/22/2006
at 07:36pm
by mattia
Email: metal dot militia<at>email dot it
Features
:
9
Questo amplificatore ?? il piu versatile tra tutti quelli che io abbia mai visto, forse la Diezel Herbert pu?? competere, ma a quel punto il prezzo diventa veramente inacessibile. Tre canali completamente separati per eq, gain, master e presence. Per quasi ogni canale sono disponibili tre modi (anche se si differenziano solo per quantit?? di gain). Fx loop tra i pi?? sofisticati che abbia mai visto, anche se a causa del genere (thrash metal) che suono, non sfrutto. L'opzione solo ?? molto utile specialmente per le vie di mezzo tra il lead e la distorsione. Inoltre il controllo finale dell'output permette di mantenere ben proporzionati i livelli dei tre canali tra di loro. Insomma...una Mesa.
Sound Quality
:
8
Sono passato da un solid state Marshall a una Mesa. Il cambiamento si ?? sentito e nei suonandola le prime volte sembrava un suono povero di gain, ma questi incovenienti capitano quando si passa dall'ascolto di armoniche dispari (emesse dai solid state) alle armoniche pari (emesse dagli ampli valvolari). Ed ?? un bene. Credetemi il suono valvolare sembra inizialmente piatto, ma non ?? cos??: ovviamente dipende dal tipo di cassa che si ha disposizione. Personalmente consiglio il Celestion V30. Fantastici. La mia testata e la mia cassa (Mesa Recto Cab 4x12) creano un volume enorme di eq, con un gain diverso dal solito ronzio dei solid state (a livello di gain battuto solo forse dalla mitica Peavey 5150). Questo ?? il vero suono, almeno per me, ognuno ha il suo...
Reliability
:
9
Adesso che l'ho scoperta non potrei farne a meno. Quando mi capita di suonare con qualche altro ampli rimpiango amaramente di aver lasciato a casa il mio amplificatore. Per quanto riguarda la resistenza e l'affidabilit?? di questo amplificatore penso che potrei portarmela anche in guerra, ovviamente ora la tratto come un oggetto di cristallo delicatissimo, comunque questi ampli, Mesa in generale, sono magnifici...solidi come carrarmati.
Customer Support
:
5
Inizialmente ho avuto problemi per l'attesa della cassa che la mogar mi ha consegnato, tramite il rivenditore, circa tre mesi dopo la testata. Dopo un periodo liscio come l'olio, si ?? rotta una valvola finale e mi sono fatto una dozzina di volte la strada per il rivenditore dove ho comprato il tutto. Adesso sto esaminando il mio suono, forse un p?? cambiato o forse no...chi lo sa, in questi casi anche la mente fa brutti scherzi, sopratttutto quando ci sono in ballo parecchi soldi.
Overall Rating
:
9
La pi?? versatile testata mai provata. Il suono pi?? pieno mai sentito. Possibilit?? sonore infinite. Silenziosa anche con il gain a livello massimo.
Mesa Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Per me, il massimo.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/18/2006
at 11:05pm
by Ghostman
Features
:
9
The features on this amp are amazing. There are so many features that it may be overwhelming for a novice, but given time and patience anybody can learn how to use this amp to their advantage. I really like the effects loop and different distortion settings. The only reason I am not giving it a 10 was I wish there was a wattage selector like on the Roadster and Road King.
Sound Quality
:
10
I am playing a PRS Custom 24 with HFS Pickups and a '69 Les Paul Custom with EMGs. I have the 2x12 cab with vintage 30's in it, and Monster Rock cables through out. This amp can run the gauntlet between crystal clear and holy crap I have a monster in the room.
Seriously there is no sound you can not get. If you are a player that turns the treble up to 10 mid to 0 and bass to 10 then play a guitar with EMGs and think this is going to sound great, you're wrong. The secret to getting good tone with this amp is to read the manual play with the suggested settings, then adjust to your needs. I also can not stress this enough...FIND A CAB THAT FITS WITH THE HEAD AND YOUR DESIRED TONE. If you have spent this much on an amp head, go the rest of the distance.
I play just about every style, and this amp can do it all. Take the time to learn it and again READ THE MANUAL. If you bought it used and don't have one, download it from www.mesaboogie.com
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Works great, no problems.
Customer Support
:
10
I spoke to Chris from Boogie before I got this amp. He took the time to help me narrow down which amps to demo prior to making my selection.
Overall Rating
:
9
I have been playing for 26 years and hands down this is one of the best non boutique amps out there. If it were stolen I would buy it again. The only thing that it lacks is the wattage switch, everything else is there, you just have to find it.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/25/2006
at 06:09am
by vantucky
Features
:
10
2005 model, waited a year to review this. This thing has more than enough features, for me anyway. 3 channels, each with different modes, 4 different power combinations that completely change the tonality of the channels. Parallel effects loop, took some time for me to get use to but now I appreciate it's affectiveness. I use this for everything from small 20-30 crowds up to 1000+ crowds and any gig that this isn't powerful enough for, they better have a house PA and decent soundman.
Sound Quality
:
10
OK, heres the opinion part, the first few weeks I had this amp I spent countless hours with the EQs and Power options and modes, and I'd be lying if I said it wasn't frustrating at times, but it paid off. Once you learn how the EQ works,(a bit different than any other amp I've owned) especially the difference of each guitar plugged into it, it's an amazing tool. The cleans are beautiful, the gain control is perfect for adjusting between high output and low output pup's (of course low output pups sound better for clean sounds). Where the gain control is affects the rest of the controls as well. If you run the gain high lower all the eq's. The distortion is everything from creamy smooth to ear shattering crazy. This is the first amp I've owned that I didn't have a multitude of pedals running through to get my tones. There is buzz on the highest gain settings, but not nearly as bad as most tube amps I've owned, I don't even use a gate on this if that tells you how little hum there is.
I play in a few bands everything from progressive metal to classical and pop to jazz, and this amp fits every personality that comes out of my fingers.
Reliability
:
10
The only problem I've ever had with this amp is the footswitch, the one it came with didn't work for all the functions, but I bought it from GC so they gave me a working one the next day, no hassles. If you treat this right it'll treat you right. Replace the tubes consistently, carry spare fuses and the such. I've never needed a backup, but always have my practice amp with me just incase, I can always run it through the pa.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't dealt with them, but have heard great things. This came with a 5 year transferable warranty, but I think it might outlive me.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing professionally for about 10 years and I've found that no matter what you play through there are some good sounds to be found. Before you go and blow your wad for an expensive amp make sure it has a sound that will suite YOUR playing, I've had guitarists plug into my amp and hate it, and I've plugged into other expensive amps and hated them, and I've also loved the tones I've gotten out of cheap, beat up, and used heads, so just make sure your buying a tone and not a name. I can't complain about these being to expensive, because it's worth every penny to me, if you think it's over priced DON'T buy it. For how long I plan on having this it sure makes up for buying amp after amp after amp and selling them for half what I paid.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/21/2006
at 04:54pm
by BasementShredder
Features
:
8
Made in 2006. This amp is very versatile and has features up the wazoo. Mostly, they are popular for modern metal but you could use is for just about anything. That's one of the problems. There are so many features it takes weeks to find the exact sound you want.
One thing it doesn't have is reverb. At this price and with all the features you think they could put some reverb in.
Sound Quality
:
6
Very loud. Makes a good sounding rhythm guitar amp for rock and metal. This head did not provide a useful tone for leads without a bunch of effects going through the loop. I bought this head to replace a Peavey XXX but I like the Peavey XXX tone better for the 80s style metal/thrash that I play. And you can get a decent lead tone out of the XXX without effects.
Reliability
:
8
Only had it three weeks and then returned it. Seemed pretty solid.
Customer Support
:
10
Called Mesa three times. Always got someone on the first try and the guy was very friendly and helpful.
Overall Rating
:
7
Been playing 22 years and own several guitars and a Peavey Triple XXX. This amp was overkill for my situation. If I were a full time professional musician with a tech to make your settings, patch the effects loop, etc. I would probably have kept this head. But playing out once a week with a band it was not worth the investment. There are other amps on the market where the sound difference is subtle but costs $1000 less. You can't play a Mesa head at home because the volume where it starts to sound good is way too loud for a bedroom or basement. I admit when I bought it I thought it would be cool to show off a Mesa Dual Rectifier but I would rather get another nice guitar and keep my Triple XXX.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1700
Submitted 06/08/2006
at 02:47pm
by Colin
Features
:
9
This amp features 3 channels. The three channels all have different modes as well totaling out to 8 modes. Channel one has clean and pushed. Channels two and three both have raw, vintage, and modern modes as well. It also comes with a 5 way foot switch. The rear panel features a bold a spongy mode, as well as a selection between vacuum tubes and hi power tubes. You can swap out the stock 6l6 and put in el34 tubes without getting the amp re-biased. The features are endless on this thing.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use a Fender Fat Strat with stock pickups. This amp is unbelievable. At first when I bought this I didn't really get to crank it up at my music store. When I got home I didn't crank it up that loud either, so I didn't think the amp was exactly worth the money then, until I cranked this beast. I have it hooked up to a mesa 2x12 cab, and i was blown away. This thing sounds amazing. You can tell that this is what the big bands use. It gives you that chugg chugg chugg tone and goes from a warm overdrive, to a super heavy, blow your face off distortion. This really is the balls.
Reliability
:
9
It seems pretty sturdy, I wouldn't want to drop this thing though, it is expensiivee. The tubes are probly going to have to be changed once in a while, but, no bid deal.
Customer Support
:
9
I've never have dealed with the company yet, but comes with a 5 year warranty and a 6 month warranty on the tubes.
Overall Rating
:
9
I have playing guitar for about 5 years now, so im pretty good. If this thing were stolen, I would think about getting a marshall tsl after i beat the crap out of the ass crack that stole it, but I'd probly just try and save up for another. I did get ripped off on ebay trying to buy this used, so after I losst that money, I started saving up again and just bought it new. I love everything about this amp. Sure it's pretty damn expensive, but it is worth it. Rock on
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1800
Submitted 05/21/2006
at 03:55am
by Ryan
Features
:
9
Three channel: clean, vintage gain and modern (chunky) gain. Separate eq for each channel, can use 6L6 or EL34 power tubes, fixed biased, two rectifier tubes, bold/spongy switch, tube/diode switch, fx loop level control, 5 button footswitch and no reverb.
Versatile? Hell yeah!
Has everything I need and more. Don't care at all the Recto has no reverb because I never use it on other amps either.
Sound Quality
:
9
I play a Gibson SG Standard (naturalburst) and a Gibson Flying V (ebony). The SG use to be my favorite guitar, but the Flying V has grown on me and definitely gets more play time.
I play some Punk and some Metal, but mostly play hard rock, think AC/DC, Velvet Revolver, Queens of the Stone Age, Foo Fighters, Soundgarden, etc. The Recto is a kick ass machine and I couldn't be happier with it. I like the fact that I can get vintage style distortion and then kick it into serious metal chunk. Even though I mostly play hard rock, I also like playing that "chugga chugga" metal and need an amp that can do both.
I traded in a Marshall DSL100 for this bad boy. I liked the DSL for the hard rock stuff, but it was lacking in that super saturated Metal chunk. I had to run an EQ in the loop and an overdrive in the front to come close to a decent metal tone and even then I still wasn't satisfied. I tried different pre-amp and power tubes, but still no luck. I tried everything, but at the end of the day all I had were a bunch of pedals, cords and dead batteries all over the floor and still no chunky tone. Too much hassle in my book and too many pedals to stomp while I'm playing. So I traded in the DSL and got the Recto. Now I'm only running the EQ in the loop and I don't have to fuss with any pedals, except the footswitch to change channels.
My only complaint is the clean channel, but honestly it's not even a complaint because I know high gain amps don't have the best clean tones. The cleans on the Recto are ok, it's not the best, but it's useable. High gain amps like the Recto will never sound like Fender or Vox clean because Recto's are made for distortion. Just like Fender and Vox will never have that killer distortion because they're made for cleans. I mostly play music with distortion so if I had to choose between a good clean or good distortion, I'll take distortion everytime.
Reliability
:
9
Built like a tank. Fortunately, I've never dropped it and try to be careful with it, but you know how that goes. It is built solid. I've only had it a short while, but I'm fairly confident it will take a beating and still rip out that sweet tone.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with customer service and I hope I never have too. I've heard Mesa's customer service is second to none, but I still hope I never have to find out.
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing since 1984, mostly just plucking the strings when I was bored, but I've been playing seriously now for about 6 years. If it were stolen or lost, I might buy it again, but I might buy something different instead. There is always something better out there and I like trying different equipment. The recto is definitely kick ass, but there are a ton of other amps out there that I would like to have. I wish I had a lot of money because I would probably buy them all. Anyway, I give the Dual Rectifier two thumbs up........kick ass tone machine and definitely worth the price.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1599
Submitted 05/06/2006
at 02:13am
by lpifreak101
Features
:
10
IT FEATURES JUST WHAT YOU NEED!!! Mine is a 2005, the amp is very versatile you just have to mess with it a little to get the hang of it.. but u can pretty much dial nething in after u figure it out.. dont listen to people who call this thing a metal amp... there are better clean channels.. but for almost ne type of disortion or overdrive.. this amp does better than any of them. I USE to be in a christian hardcore band.. not nemore i went off to college, but it does fine. IT IS SO LOUD!! the other guitarist in my band used a peavy 5150 head.. I could easily drown him out haha, such a great amp.
Sound Quality
:
10
lets see... i use an american fender texas special fat strat with a seymour duncan in the bridge, and a american series telecaster. I recenly used an SG standard through it and fell in love.. plan on purchasing one soon. As again i play hardcore/metal/southern rock and does all 3 great. SO nething rock this thing is gonna own. IS IT NOISY??? if you want it to be it is.. if u dont u have to mess with the treble and turn it down.. see in mesa's the treble has alot to do with the gain..the more u turn the treble up the gain goes up. THIS THING IS KILLER!! the distortion is simply the best!!
Reliability
:
10
well never gigged much with it.. but i have friends who gig with there and have been for 3-5 years.. and they do fine. MINE FEELS TOUGH.. I KNOW THAT FOR SURE.
Customer Support
:
10
I almost wasnt able to get one.. i had to call a guitar center in california for a new one in the box.. cuz all of the guitar centers have them on the floor.. but i wanted one in the box.. i mean c'mon if ur gonna spend this kind of money why not. But newayz the company helped me locate a new one.. and the closest one was in california and i was able to ship it down here.. man was i lucky!! but anyways the company seems fantastic!!
Overall Rating
:
10
Ive been playing for around 3 and a half years... my guitars include american texas special fender fat stratocaster, a 2001 fender american tele, and a 2003 mexican standard fender fat strat(my first guitar, in which i wouldnt give up for nething). I plan on buying a gibson SG standard soon! amp wise i have my dual rectifier and i run it through a standard 4x12 mesa cab with vintage 30's, i also have a fender hot rod deluxe i love to jam on. and then i have some crappy fender champion 30(solid state PFT!!!) all i use besides this is a boss tuner pedal, im not much of an effect guy. IF THIS AMP WAS STOLEN I WOULD HURT THE PERSON WHO TOOK IT VERY BADLY.. if i could keep that same one due to damage.. i would deff. buy another one. I chose this over the triple rec. becuz i still like to play in my bedroom.. and you cant do that sorta thing with triple.. ITS JUST TOO LOUD.. i can barely do that with the dual.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $400
Submitted 03/22/2006
at 09:21am
by nate daley
Features
:
10
Its a Mesa Dual Rec you knw what the deal is.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use epiphone loaded with dimarzio pickups. It is the best amp I have ever played.It takes awhile to understand and it does have its qirks but it is an unbelieveable tool once you understand it. Now alot tof amps just seem unsophisticated to me. I know alot of people get on it beacause they are hard to get tot sound good but I never had too much trouble with it.
Reliability
:
10
Bought it used havent changesd the tubes and it works great.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
wouldnt know since I havent need tot to use them.
Overall Rating
:
9
Alot of guys have opinions on this amp that are coming from a dislike of the music the amp is used for. Hey I dont get on victorias cause I dont like blues and I dont get on VOX because I dont like pop rock. If my REC were stolen the person responsible would be hunted down like a dog and shot. I have played plenty of amps from bogners to diezels to VHT to riveras and marshalls. Most of these amps are amazing, but I personally get the tone in my head out with this amp so Ill take it you guys with your voxs and marshalls and peavys go have fun.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: $3600
Submitted 02/26/2006
at 12:45am
by scott
Email: stevelukather<at>excite dot com
Features
:
10
Made in 2005, 3 channels blah blah blah, you know all the features.
Sound Quality
:
2
I use a peavey 5150 4x12 cab with it, which blows the mesa 4x12 away.
I use Ernie Ball Music Man Luke guitars with it. I bought this amp about 6 months back now, l bought it cause thats what the other members in the band wanted me to get so l thought l'd buy it for the greater good of the band, l never have liked Mesa Boogie amps, and l haven't changed my mind. First things first, throw out the stock tubes, they are complete junk, sound like sh!t, l put jj tubes in, a huge improvement on the sound.
The clean channel, l can't get this channel clean, it distorts a bit, and it annoys me.
Another thing l should note as well, your pickups effect the tone of this amp, i've found l can only use the EMG's in my Luke to get any sustian out of this amp, if l use Dimarzio, which would sound fantastic through my old amp would sound fantastic, though this amp they sound like sh!t.
I'm gonna try putting el34 tubes in it, if the sound doesn't improve, l'm gonna get rid of it and get what l really wanted a rivera knucklehead.
Reliability
:
10
It seems like a realiable amp, l've used it a couple of times for gigs, l probably wouldn't take a back up for it, it hasn't broken down yet.
I'd just recommend changing the tubes straight away.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't dealt with them
Overall Rating
:
3
I used to have a Peavey 5150ii, Randall, Marshall. I'd prefer the Peavey and Randall amp over the Mesa.
If it was stolen l wouldn't get it replaced, l'd buy the Rivera Knucklehead instead.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1400?
Submitted 02/06/2006
at 11:26am
by gordabega
Email: gnelson731<at>msn dot com
Features
:
10
amp made in 2004? I've had it for about 2 years. I have played in various bands in the past 2 years and it went from pop to rock to currently hard rock. i've gone from relying on the effects loop to now not using it at all, so it's nice that the features are there. not a one trick pony at all. i love the clean too. my first tube amp, and it wasn't impossible to figure out.
Sound Quality
:
9
i have 2 of the LTD EC-1000's. one with a JB/59 setup and one with a 490/498T set up. they both sound great through it. i have both a 4x12 and a 2x12 and though the 2x12 doesn't have the same low end, they both sound great with this head. a little hiss at times, but that's what volume pedals are for. i don't like the *pop* that y0ou get when you change from channel 2 to channel 3.
Reliability
:
10
i love this amp. fires up every time. my roadie dumped it (4 foot drop, landed upside down in the dumpster juice) during a load in at the biggest show of the year last year, and it fired right up.
Customer Support
:
10
i'd say mesa's staff is freakin awesome. g mart's people suck. when i bought it, it was missing a rectifier tube and they gave me the wrong channel switcher cable. i called mesa instead of dealing with the clowns from g mart, and they shipped me a new cable and got on g mart's case about stealing tubes from the floor models. (jerks) i also called them about the tubes, because i am new to tube heads... and they assured me that it wasn't going to blow up.
Overall Rating
:
10
i've been playing for about 15 years, and playing crappy gear for most of it(guitars AND amps). my buddy had a 2 channel recto when they first came out, and i was jealous. he was single, i wasn't. i waited 10 years to get my recto, and God himself won't pry it out of my hands.
i tried out other amps, mainly the nomad, and a few marshalls (ballpark around $1500) and i guess i loved it before i tried it... and even going head to head on a few models, the 3 channel recto is perfect for me. if i could change anything, it'd be that *pop* while switching channels.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1499
Submitted 02/05/2006
at 10:50pm
by REFORMED MARSHALLER
Features
:
10
YOU KNOW THEM ALL. I HAVE THE THREE CHANNEL SOLO HEAD. HAD IT FOR 2 YEARS NOW. JUST THE MOST THOUGHT OUT FEATURES A GUITARIST COULD ASK FOR..INCREDIBLY DESIGNED AND LAID OUT, A PIECE OF ART!
Sound Quality
:
10
GIBSON LES PAUL. HAMER DIABLO(AMERICAN W/SEYMORE DUNCANS)...AMONG OTHERS...I PLAY MOSTLY METAL...80'S TO NUMETAL..FIRST OFF, THESE MORONS THAT SAY IT SOUNDS CRAPPY THROUGH A MARSHALL 1960 CAB..GET A CLUE YOU IDIOTS..YA OK MARSHALL AND CELESTION SPEAKERS ARE LIKE THE FOUNDATION OF THE ROCK GUITAR SOUND UNLESS YOU GREW UP IN A CAVE..YOU PROBABLY NEVER EVEN OWNED ONE...I PLAYED MARSHALL FOR OVER 20 YEARS AND THEY ARE GOOD AMPLIFIERS, AND THE BEST CABS..BUT THE MESAS JUST TOOK IT TO THE NEXT LEVEL...IF YOU ALWAYS PLAYED MARSHALLS BUT ALWAYS FELT IT WAS JUST A TINY BIT LACKING (MAYBE HAD IT MODDED, OR CONSIDERED IT?) THIS IS THE AMP FOR YOU..MARSHALLS ARE GREAT AND ILL PROBABLY OWN A FEW MORE IN THE NEAR FUTURE, BUT WHEN I SAY THEY ARE A LITTLE LACKING, YOU KNOW WHAT I MEAN DONT YOU???JUST NOT ENOUGH GAIN, NO BOOST FOR SOLOS,WEAK EQ, OR A GOOD CLEAN CHANNEL..AND IM NOT TALKING TO YOU MUSICIANS THAT HAVE NEVER OWNED A MARSHALL, BECAUSE IF YOU ARE SERIOUS ABOUT GUITAR YOU HAVE OWNED AT LEAST 1 MARSHALL( AND I MEAN TUBE MARSHALL) THE SOLID STATE ONES ARE NOT MARSHALLS...ALL IN ALL IF YOUR SERIOUS ABOUT GUITAR THE DUAL RECTIFIER IS THE NEW MARSHALL...
Reliability
:
10
KEEP NEW TUBES IN IT AND KEEP IT CLEAN...COMMON SENSE STUFF....
Customer Support
:
10
GOOD PEOPLE TO DEAL WITH...AND ITS ALL AMERICAN (PRICELESS)!!!
Overall Rating
:
10
IVE BEEN PLAYING PROFESSIONALLY FOR 15 YEARS.IVE OWNED PRETTY MUCH EVERY BRAND OF AMPLIFIER AT ONE TIME OR ANOTHER...AND LIKE I SAID, THIS REVIEW IS FOR SERIOUS GUITARISTS WHO HAVE ACTUALLY OWNED QUALITY GEAR IN THE PAST AND HAVE SOME KIND OF IDEA HOW HIGH END AMPLIFIERS WORK...NOT THESE KIDS GOING FROM A ROLAND CUBE 30 TO A BOOGIE, THEN TELLING ME A DUAL RECTIFIER SOUNDS LIKE ASS THROUGH A MARSHALL CABINET WITH CELESTIONS IN IT LMAO...IF YOUR SERIOUS ABOUT MUSIC AND WANT THE BEST ROCK GUITAR SOUND. SPEND SOME FRIGGIN MONEY ON YOUR EQUIPMENT, CHRIST IT WILL LAST FOREVER...MESA IS THE NEW AND IMPROVED MARSHALL..
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1,599
Submitted 02/02/2006
at 04:25pm
by Cody
Features
:
9
3 channels, 8 modes, variac switch...etc. The two most important features on this head is 3 INDEPENDENT CHANNELS and the external switching capabilities. A lot of amps claim to have 3 channels but few truly are. Not one nob is shared with any channel exept for the master volume and "solo" which can be disabled. This is extremely important because it allows you to dial up 3 sepereate tones and switch between them easily. A lot of amps make you choose between a nice clean sound or nice distorted tone because the channels share key feauters like e.q. and presence. I have found very few so called 3 channel tube amps capable of this besides the dual rectifier . With my marshall i always had to re-tweak the e.q. and presence when i would switch between my clean and overdrive channel. The clean would be too thin or the overdrive too muddy. The other important feature is the external swithching. This allows you to control the amp with a midi footswitch and essentially change effects and channels simultaneously!!!! As a pro musician this is a feature that i found sets this amp apart from many of the others in its class. I take one point off only because of no reverb. Even though I use rackmount effects for reverb I think it would be nice a nice feature to have.
Sound Quality
:
8
I have found this amp to be very sensitive to what guitar and pickups I use. I play and own a lot of different guitars ( Les Paul, Strat, Custom Ibanez and Charvels) and the amp responded diferently to all of them. The Les paul sounded fat and heavy, like it should. And the bolt on necks sounded thinner with more attack. You need to fine tune this amp to respond with the guitar you play and if your guitar has bad tone or no tone this amp will exploit that. With that said i found the amp to be pretty versatile but keep in mind that this amp has a tone and characteristic of its own!!! (more so than most mesa's) Thats why they are so popular!! Although you can dial up a variety of sounds the amp sounds best doing what its built to do which is be a high gain crunch machine. I got turned on to Mesa Boogie because i was tired of using overdrive pedals and this amp truly doenst need them!!! What it does need is to be cranked up. This isnt a bedroom amp. It's made to record with and play live. You need to get the volume up and let the amp breathe to get the kind of sustain and gain Mesa Boogie is known for. You wont even need to have the gain maxed out once you learn how to operate the amplifier. Also dont spend $1600 on a head and play it through a crappy cabinet. The difference is night and day. A GOOD CAB CAN NOT MAKE A BAD AMP SOUND GOOD, BUT A BAD CAB CAN RUIN A GREAT AMP!!! I like this head paired with a marshall 1960 slant cab personally. It sounds brighter than the mesa cab to me. I give it an 8 because the amp is what is. If you like it you love it and if you dont, you dont.
Reliability
:
10
These things are tanks. I love it!!!! (Heavy too!!)
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I havent had any problems and therefore have not needed customer support but their manuals are very thorough and useful. Read them!!!!!!
Overall Rating
:
10
I have played in many different bands and situations ranging from big bands playing stuff like Glenn Miller with a small fender combo to baseball stadiums with marshall stacks blazing and I have found Mesa Boogie to be the best bang for the buck when it comes to high gain "boutique" amps. To get an amp with more tone or features you are looking at $3200-$4000+ for either a Bogner or a Diezel. And even then there are people who would still rather have the Dual Rectifier because its just got "That Sound". My advice is to go to a high end retailer like Tone Merchants where can try them all out right next to each other with people who know how to use the eqipment and get a good sound out of each amp because each one has its own pros and cons.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1,700.00
Submitted 01/30/2006
at 02:57pm
by Jordan
Email: jordan_dedo at yahoo<dot>com
Features
:
10
2004 or 2005 model. This amp is very versatile and suitable for many styles including light rock, rock, hard rock, nu-metal, modern metal. I have trouble getting an "old-school" metal sound with this amp. It is voiced a little harsh.
I still give it a 10 though. It has more sound options than most other brands...but all Mesa's do!
Sound Quality
:
9
I play strats, ESP's equipped with EMG 81/60Alnico, Gibson Les Paul Studio with Stock Gibson pups(490 & 498), Washburn Dimebag Darrell 333 Signature Model(replaced bridge pup with Seymour Duncan Screamin Demon), and soon a schecter c-1 classic.
I get very different and very great tones with all of these guitars.
The downside is that with so many tonal options from the amp, and so many different pups, its hard to consistantely get the same tones. I am always turning knobs on this thing!
The amp is almost dead-quiet when I'm not playing and I don't use any noise reduction units. This may be in part due to the fact that I only hit a wah pedal in my signal chain. More effects usually equal a bunch of noise and loss of tone and high end texture.
The clean channel is one of the best I've heard from ANY amp. If you know how to dial it in, you can get a beautiful, acoustic-like shimmering tone!
The distortion from this ranges from mild bluesy clip, to ultimate razor sharp metal distortion. There are also some nice "brown" sounds in the middle using the "vintage" voicing.
The fx loop is parallel. I run a Line 6 Pod Pro rackmount unit in the loop and dedicate it to my clean channel. When I switch on my clean it automatically has reverb(which is unfortunately missing from the head), delay, and chorus or whatever I assign on my Pod.
I'll give it a 9 because it does sound amazing, but the modern voicing IMO could be slightly less harsh and reverb should be on every amp!
One more thing about the tone...use a mesa cab with V-30's!!! I've tried this amp with tons of different speakers and the V-30's sound the best. They really smooth out the sound. Not to mention the amp was voiced for these speakers. Besides, Mesa cabs are the best-looking and best built!
Reliability
:
10
This amp is of the highest build quality. Mesa has an attention to detail that no other company comes close to! I've owned Carvin heads, Marshalls, Soldano, Line 6, and the Mesa is the best-looking and most durable.
I gig consistantely and have never had a problem with tubes or anything.
Customer Support
:
10
I haven't dealt with the company concerning any issues with the amp(haven't needed to)
I have however called to talk about using the amp's slave-out option and other random setup situations, and they treated me like a friend and talked for awhile about guitars and whatnot...they are very nice and helpful.
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing guitar for 10+ years. I attended Music Tech College and am a tone-freak. I mentioned already the gear that I own/have owned. If this amp were stolen, I would either buy another one, or a Hughes & Kettner Trilogy(same price) just to try something else. But all in all, this is one of the nicest amps out there for the styles I listed above.
I love how this baby looks, feels, smells, plays, sounds, tastes.
If I could change one thing, it would be adding tube reverb, but the Dual Rectifier Roadster coming out in 2006 will have this feature, along with some features from Mesa's Road King.
For what it's intended to do, which is provide a multitude of varying tones from mild to extreme and everything in between, I give it 9...there's always room for improvement!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1200
Submitted 01/03/2006
at 12:03pm
by Brandon Abhorrance
Email: abhorrance at hotmail<dot>com
Features
:
10
Arond 2000 or sooner.
The amp is extremely verstatile for Metal, Rock, Blues, Emo, etc, raw, crunchy, thick, etc. The channel switching is nice, the effects loop has total control.
If anything, I wish it had less features. All the switched may contribute to why the 3 Channels sound inferior to older Mesa models.
I don't use this amp anymore as I am rocking a 2 Channel Triple Rectifier. It has enough power and volume for sure.
All tube. However, it comes with pretty bad sounding chinese tubes. I would recommend replacing them immediately with something with more clarity and grit.
Sound Quality
:
5
I use an LTD MH-400 with EMG 81/60 setup. It is a little thin for metal. It has quite a bit of hiss, but that is normal for tube amps. It does make crappy popping sounds when switching channels though. The amp can cover a broad spectrum of fat, to thin, to cold, to harsh, and hi-gain applications. The clean channel distorts or can be totally clean at high volumes depending on how the gain is dialed. I personally like a slit bit of breakup.
The disortion is not very brutal at all (unlike the older 2 channel models). For some reason, the 3-Channel distortion sounds more like a stomp box; extremely thin and choppy. The low end is very thick, but very sloppy. The definition is harsh and lacks clarity.
I give the 2 Channel a 9 for tone, and these a 5. This head possibly sounds as bad as a 5150, but not nearly as bad as a Triple X or a Marshal JCM 2000.
Reliability
:
10
Its a beast. Probably the most brutally built amp. No worries about that. I broke the master volume pot, but that was my fault for loading it poorly into the trailer. The fix was easy an inexpensive. The tubes do need frequent replacement, but its good for a vibrant sound.
Customer Support
:
8
Great. Return phone calls promptly with answers. However, they have a lack of authorized service centers.
Overall Rating
:
4
I have been playing for 11 years. I currently am playing a 2-Channel Triple Rectifier, and a Krank Revolution Series 1. I have also owned a 2-Channel Rectifier, and a Peavery 5150 EVH Head.
I would not buy this amp again. I would recommend finding a used 2-Channel. Superior sound.
I have compared it side by side with 2-Channel rectifiers, and swapped tube setups.
I wish this amp circuitry sounded like 2-Channels, but retained its 3-Channel features.
Despite this amp having mroe versatile features, it is dissapointing in sound compared to its predecessors. It is nearly impossible to get a huge metal sound without using a compressor and sonic maximizer. Mesa had been making the best amps of all time (putting Marshall and Randall to shame), but with this generation, the amps were a serious letdown. Simultaneously, other Manufacturers are producing amps that are rivalling.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1399
Submitted 11/15/2005
at 02:46pm
by Claymore
Features
:
10
I bought a Mesa Dual Rectifier 3 channel Solo Head new this year so I assume it is a 2005.
If you have read any of the other posts on this site then you know how much this amp has to offer. I seriously recommend reading the manual in depth (it's available for download through the Mesa site if you buy one used) however because there is so much to know in order to get the right tone. This is not a plug and play head. You need to know what you are looking for and how to tweak everything.
As mentioned this model has 3 channels with an effects loop and solo option for a little volumne boost to push your gain over the top.
The clean channel could use a little reverb but, a Boss Digital Reverb gives me all that I need.
Sound Quality
:
10
I play an Ibanez SZ720 with Duncan IBZ pick-ups and let me say this....do NOT buy a Mesa head unless you have the guitar to play through one. As great as it is it WILL NOT compensate for cheap pick-ups or a shoddy guitar.
So far the only minor disappointment I have is that at first I couldn't get enough volume from my clean channel without turning up the gain giving it a grittier sound. I've solved this problem by clicking on the solo option with the level set high enough to bring it up to the same as the other two channels.
The tone is amazing whether pounding out muted chords or running leads. As I said above (along with everyone else who has taken the time to learn this amp) it takes some work to find the tone that suits you. A Mesa Recto Cab carries a heavy low-end already so I've found that with my rig I need to keep the low down about 8-9 (picturing the setting as a number on the face of a clock) or it makes the tone muddy. The mid's I had a harder time tweaking because I need to keep a chunky palm-muted sound but, crisp enough for leads. So far I have had the best luck with it set slightly below the low around 8. The Treble I have set higher at about 12. I found that anything lower and I lost some of the distinction between individual notes. This can also be resolved by boosting the presence a bit.
As other users have also mentioned this amp only sounds good when you are pushing plenty of volume through the tubes. The harder you work them the more natural overdrive you get.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
So far the only issue I have had was with the footswitch. During the last song of a recent gig I switched from channel 2 to channel 3 but, noticed immediately that something was wrong. Looking down I was shocked to see every light across the pedal illuminated. After a few dumbfounded seconds I began clicking the switches that should not have been lit and they switched off eventually giving me the channel I had originally selected.
This (so far) has been a one time occurance and I am at a loss as to the explanation but, other than that I have had no problems. The Tolex is a little delicate but, then again a little nail polish has fixed the few small dings.
Customer Support
:
10
I have not yet had any interaction with the company. The warranty is pretty sweet though and I was able to find a list of authorized service centers pretty easily.
Overall Rating
:
10
Over-all, I'd say this amp lives up to everything I was hoping for and dreamed about when first learning how to play. I played Marshall for a long time but, finally made the decision to put up the extra money to step up to the Mesa level and I have not been disappointed. I would absolutely buy another one if it were ever lost or stolen.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1700
Submitted 11/13/2005
at 01:38pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
You all know the features to this product, if not scroll down or visit Mesa's website.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use 2 guitars right now on "the Mesa". A custom Les Paul and a Ibanez with modded pickups. This is the most amazing amp EVER. If you get bad tone out of it, you're an idiot. Granted it takes time getting used to the knobs, but once you get it, you'll be overwhelmed by it.
Most of the fools on this site don't know squat. They are stupid metal heads who look at an amp as a toy. I, on the other hand, am not a metal-head, i used to be, but not anymore. Notice how every "metal-head" on here says "this amp doesn't have enough gain". I found the solution to your problems. 1) Call Mesa, ask them why you have no gain. 2) They will tell you the following: "You have too much bass in your eq.....Mesa is ALREADY a bass heavy, HIGH GAIN amplifier....turn the bass down between 10-12 oclock." I know this because I called them and asked them. They told me that, i did it, and it worked. I have crushing tones now. The bass is still there (at 11oclock on my tone) and it's still "punch you in the face". It's not a traditional solid state amp, you CAN NOT have the bass set to MAX and the Gain MAXED. If you do, well then you're gonna get crap for tones.
I've played through all kinds of amps before i bought this one, and nothing compared. And now that i've been playing on it for a year and a half, i know i could never be parted from it.
Reliability
:
8
It's reliable. Tubes suck and so do blown fuses. Be sure to have spares.
Customer Support
:
10
They are awesome, although their hours suck. They know my amp better than i do, it's incredible.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing guitar for over 6 years now. Music my whole life. I've owned Marshalls, Ampegs, and Line 6s. I've owned over 8 guitars. If this amp was stolen, i'd die. I would buy it again, but i'd try to find this amp first. I don't know if could save up for another 7 months to buy it. I love every aspect of this amp. The way it looks is intimidating. I swaped out the Red Power light for a Crystal Purple light....it's rad as shit.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: 1595 (# sterling)
Submitted 11/05/2005
at 05:18am
by Mike from Rough Justice
Features
:
10
Plenty - all listed below already. Controllable solo boost is brilliant.
Sound Quality
:
9
This is a tough one. I must admit I bought this amp because of the hype/buzz around it and didn't give it a full work-out at the store when I bought it. "It's a MESA it must sound amazing" - wrong! For months I've struggled to get a decent sound out of it. You turn up at a gig/jam with a MESA and everyone assumes that you will be a fantastic player with an incredible sound - so anything less makes you look pretty stupid and as the other reviews on here show it is easy to sound really bad through this amp. There are some many options that you have to work through lots of bad settings to get to the good ones. The manual talks about the "sweet spot", but doesn't tell you that until you find it you are screwed! The EQ works in a totally non-standard and non-intuitive way, so forget everything you think you know from your other amps. But once you get it sorted it's pretty amazing.
The main things that turned things around for me were getting a decent cab and setting the EQ way down. I'd been running through a Marshall 1936 2x12 and that sucked the life out of the sound. I'm now using a GENZ BENZ G-Flex 2x12 and it rocks! I've taken the gain down to around the halfway mark and put the presence close to zero. This has really helped. I've also stopped using the Modern mode on any of the channels and stuck an MXR ZW44 as a boost in front of the amp. I tried a BBE Sonic Maximiser in the effects loop but that sent everything a bit OTT.
I can now get huge tone and that ideal "clean distortion", if you know what I mean. Every individual note sounds distorted and "heavy" but they don't run into each other in a noisy mush. It still isn't the best amp for shredding - I'd say the 5150 is better for that - but if you want a fat quality tone that cuts through and impresses people then this is it.
Reliability
:
9
I've had other MESA gear and it was unreliable trash (e.g. NOMAD series). The Dual Recto seems rock solid though. I still take a backup (5150) to gigs just in case.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed it
Overall Rating
:
9
The most frustrating amp I've ever owned - but it can sound amazing if you work at it. Worth the effort.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1200
Submitted 10/20/2005
at 03:58pm
by aaa
Features
:
10
its awesome...more than enough for me.
Sound Quality
:
10
everyone with the tight metal tone problems....ok, i play through a gibson sg voodoo...WAAAY too much bass....but i run directly in through a boss eq pedal, and then a boss noise suppressor..i use the the eq as a volume boost and i also take out some of the lows but i leave everything else in the middle...then as far as the amp goes, i leave my bass at 11:00, my mid at 11:00, treble at 1:00, presence at 12:00, master at 10:30, and gain at 2:30..sometimes 3:00. but thats it..i had a lot of trouble tightening up the sound but its because there is just too much tone ...and trust me the other guitarist uses a line 6 and they sound nice on their own but even when our volumes are matched perfect all you can hear out of his is really high notes and thats about it...
Reliability
:
10
take care of it and it will take care of you...
Customer Support
:
5
havent had to yet but you can only get ahold of them at certain times and you would think that...oh well...i dont know..theyre getting a 5
Overall Rating
:
10
ive had it for quite a while now and ive been playing shows since i bought it and it has held up fine...any problems that i ever had with it live were because of the place we were playing and not because of the amp..(bad wiring, wires everywhere, bad grounds..) its made for some interesting times though...picking up local radio stationes during a show...some people would get mad but i dont..i like noise.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: $3600 new (AUD, Australian $)
Submitted 10/04/2005
at 07:38pm
by Brad
Features
:
8
$3600 (AUD)
Features: 8
Paid AUD$3,600 new in Australia, sold for $3,000 almost 2 years later on Ebay with 4 brand new EL34 tubes.
Excellent features - see other review for a more detailed description. High quality build and presentation (best looking amp out there IMO).
The one feature I do (did) not really like was the fixed bias switch (EL34/6l6) although it is cool being able to choose the type of power tubes used. The rather cold bias does not bring the best out of this amp. I think it might be a bit of a con to get you to use the over priced Mesa tubes (mesa dont actually manufacture tubes but select them from other brands and put a messa logo on them). An adjustable bias would allow the amp to truly shine. If I had the time and money to install this mod I would have done so and maybe I wouldnt have sold it. BUt in the end I was just happy to get rid of it and start again (with a FRAMUS COBRA!).
A deep switch like the one on the COBRA (and ENGL) may have also helped to tighten this amp up a bit.
Sound Quality
:
6
Sound Quality: 6
First. This is a good amp and they CAN sound great. But it didnt suit me. BE YOUR OWN JUDGE....My opinion is based on a desire for heavy metal, TIGHT, responsive, articulate, brutal distortion.
I enjoy a variety of styles but mainly play heavy metal (i.e.death, power, speed, thrash, shred, all metal...). I use a Gibson Les Paul, EMG 81 in the bridge...and forced to use a tube screamer as a boost (also tried metal zone, + others), Boss GE7 EQ, digitech RP2000....and more. Tried the mesa cab but traded it for the oversized Marshall mode four 400 cab which sounded better to my ears + $600AUD cheaper.
Sadly, I sold the amp. IMO it is not really that good for fast, heavy, articulate metal. Great for limp bizkit, linkin park, foo fighters, papa roach, korn, punk pop, teeny bopper shit, nu metal.... but not for shadows fall, killswitch, chimaira, slayer, vai, satriani etc.(I know killswitch, metallica etc. have used them but they also used boost pedals, EQ and $$$$$ worth of gear behind it ... which at this price is totally unnacceptable to me, isnt it designed for metal? You should be able to plug in and get that sound without cheap pedals)
DISSAPOINTING. Believe me, I tried VERY hard to love this amp. It was like being with this really hot, popular chick, everyone wants her, your blinded by the beauty, status and prestege, you lust over her but when she's finally yours you realise that shes not that good and you start to look elsewhere....lol. At times I thought it sounded great and I was quite happy, but overall unsatisfied especially when considering the price, 'tricks' I had to do to boost/shape the tone etc.
I could get close to the sound I wanted by using boost pedals and graphic EQ but this created unwanted noise, and feedback at volume. I tried hush, noise gates etc but this just $ucked tone. Frustrating. Friends and other bands were using much cheaper amps (eg. 5150's) and getting a better, tighter metal tone, better harmonics etc. without ANY pedals!I was in denial at the time but can now admit being a bit jealous. I would have a go on their amps (im talking about amps now, not chicks! lol) and not want to swap back (not that I let them know)
It wasnt untill I started playing in a band that I really noticed the amps flaws and decided to sell, thankfully I got a great deal and didnt loose out too much (it cost lessthan $1 a day!). On the other hand, the guy who bought it played rock (foo fighters kinda stuff) and loved the amp... It can sound great alone, in the studio or with vocals, but throw in drums, bass etc. and its a different story.
I did everything to try and keep it, different tubes (Sovtek El34 made it sound 100% crappier!) looked into mods etc. Mods are really expensive in Australia and not many people want to touch these amps. The guys who offered to do mods didnt seem very experienced with mesa, it would have been a gamble. If I lived in the USA i would have taken it to Voodoo amps for sure.
Oh and they are right about the clean channel, dont but it for this as its not great although I personall dont mind a dirty clean sound.
The volume levels alter dramatically between modes/channels and the effects loop is absolute shit.
I give it a 4 without clean boost pedals and a 6 with pedals and EQ. If I was into simple strumming power chord type rock, grunge or nu metal slop and didnt need an tight bottom end, I might give it a 7 or 8.
Reliability
:
8
Reliability: 8
At first it seemed to be a totally reliable, trustworthy amp. I did take extremely good care of it though.
BUT......
* It did blow some fuses mysteriously, had it serviced under warranty and they found nothing wrong with the amp.It had the wrong fuse installed (fast burning). Im not sure if this was the initial problem or if the music shop had given me the wrong fuse after the first or second time. Anyway, they put a new fuse in(slow burning. It was fine for another 6 months then blew agin while playing at bedroom level. Wiered. (first time it occured in a rehersal studio, other times at home).
It also had this problem around the same time with one of the power tubes glowing RED HOT. Again they couldn't find any problems within the amp, the tube was only slightly worn, they replaced it any way (charging me $40).
BUT, they are built tough.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Customer Support: N/A
Never dealt with mesa USA personally. Their Australian warranty representative was helpful but did not 'have time' to mod my amp, fair enough but disapointing. He also gave me some advice saying not to use EMG81 pickups if I want a tight bottom end. Cant really take this seriously because the 81 actually made a huge improvement over the gibson bridge humbucker to the distortion, and how many pro metal players choose to use 81's (how many dont? lol).
Overall Rating
:
6
Overall Rating: 6
Been playing for 16 years. I would say that I have a fair amount of experience. Believe me, I tweak the shit out of this thing. Yes the controls are extremely sensative and you can find some BETTER tones if you tweak, and tweak, and tweak but in the end I was just not satisfied.
Mainly used Marshalls before the mesa, now own a Kick ass Framus COBRA, which are actually cheaper than mesa in Aust.(satisfaction at last!). If it was stolen or lost I would be very pissed off, eventually get over it, claim the insurance and buy a different amp (COBRA).
In the end I sold it for AUD$3,000 (after spending $170 on new tubes the previous week) and bought a brand new COBRA for AUD$3,300. MESA realy hold their value and are quite easy to sell, they're very popular, and not so common in Aust. due to the overly high retail price (AUD$4,595). So if you do buy one and decide to sell (at least in Aust) it is no big deal. You will get a decent price (as long as you take good care of it).
I really wish the Recto had what I was after, I tried, but in the end simply had to move on. If the distortion was tighter (without having to use pedals) I would have been very satisfied, everything else was ok.
If your thinking of buying one, try it out. And I dont mean in a music shop. Try to borrow or hire one and play it over the weekend. Let the novelty, beauty, and hype wear off, then decide if its really what you want. You will either love it or decide to move on as I did (it just took me a couple of years to face facts).
Dont get me wrong, its a great amp in many ways (construction, its somewhat versatile, trademark rock/soft metal tone, # of features) but it is not for everyone.
DONT THINK IT WILL BE PERFECT FOR HEAVY METAL BECAUSE ITS IMPRESSIVE METAL GRILL AND PLACE ON METALLICA'S STAGE. Looks can be decieving.
Submitted by Bradman006.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1100 used
Submitted 09/28/2005
at 02:44pm
by Micah Shortridge
Email: micahfaith<at>cox dot net
Features
:
10
150 Watts Class A/B Tube
This amp is great although it is very intricate and requires learning to use almost as much as learning to play the guitar.
It would be nice to have a headphone jack in the back of it--its a bit loud for an apt.
Sound Quality
:
9
I play a 97 Gibson SG with a stock 490T on the Bridge and a PRS Dragon 2 Bass in the neck. I play the Triple Rectifier 3 Channel through a Standard Recto Cab, but have also played through Marshall 1960A?s with the GT-75 Speakers. I look for a tone somewhere in the hard-core to hard-rock arena. Before owning this amp, I had a 1996 Tremoverb. After a couple of partially frustrating years of changing pick-ups (JB, SH14, Dragon 2 Treble, EMG 81), twisting knobs to no end, adding pedals (including the Aphex Aural Xciter and compressors), I believe I finally know what I wanted to hear out of this amp.
Reliability
:
9
I did blow a fuse once when I first recieved it from the shipper on ebay--but have not had any issues since (that was 2 yrs ago)
Customer Support
:
10
I called the Mesa tech-support line and the guy called me back the same day after hours!! I was impressed!! I must have talked with the guy for an hour about my questions in finding the tone I was looking for.
Overall Rating
:
9
It has always seemed that I have been unable to produce the mid-range girth in the Modern voicing (Channel 3) without compromising the hugeness of the Dipped-Mid?s tone that everyone buy?s this amplifier for. In the manual it suggests an instant gratification setting of 12-1 on the Bass, 7-8 on the Mid?s and 12 on the Treble. My experience with this setting has been the Mid?s are obviously non-existent and the bottom-end is great, the treble is thin and very compressed-feeling with little or no attack. Logic would tell me that I would need to turn up the Mid?s to meet my preference of the aforementioned desired result. What I notice as I turn up the Mid?s is that by the time I reach noon on this control the ?Chunk? is completely gone and the strings are extremely focused and difficult to play. For some reason no matter where I place the Mid-Range knob, there is a hollow-ness in the Lower-Mid?s where you get the nice, big attack that you hear in the recordings. Recommendations in the Mesa manual suggest that you place the Treble control in the 11-1 range ?For the most balanced representation of the 3 regions?. I have noticed that as you turn the Treble from nothing to 12 or more the clarity of sustain is increased but the signal, intern, is thinned out and the entire spectrum of the mid-range is thinned to hollowness and no attack. This thinning starts after the 10 range on the Treble dial. Right @ the 9 spot I noticed that the girth in the Mid?s was introduced. By the time I reached the 10-10:15 region more than enough clarity of sustain while retaining girth in the notes and harmonics. As of this minute I find my best settings with the Bass in the 12-1 region, Mid?s in the 10 region and Treble set to the 10-10:15 region. I keep the Presence @ 11-11:30 to bring out clarity and growl, Master set to about 10, and the gain is usually between 1:45 and 3:00. I sincerely hope that @ least 1 person reads this and is able to shave months of frustration off of their never-ending tone quest. Also, I have read some postings that down the duals and triples, saying that they are crap and cannot be used for metal, and bla, bla, bla. I would like to be quoted as I say ?The only thing I have ever found Mesa guilty of is sacrificing ease-of-use for versatility.? The one thing that all should know when using a Mesa is that it will challenge you to know what it is that your ear is hearing before it will give it to you. It is not a Marshal or other amp that can have the Bass pegged, Mid?s off and Treble @ half to get a good even tone. I would like to encourage all out there who are discouraged with this amp to keep on it?the sound is in there, it just takes the right key to unlock it. Also, before you spend everything you have trying to buy new pick-ups, stomp-boxes etc?. Remember that you didn?t spend $1800 for something that you should have to. Pick-ups, stomp-boxes etc... are great to accent what you are doing?but the bottom line is that you should be able to get almost right on without them.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: 1600 (pounds sterling)
Submitted 09/28/2005
at 12:14pm
by Dave mustaine is a legend
Features
:
No Opinion
It was made in around 2003 purchaces from machine head music in surry england, The amp is fairly versatile having the three different channels with three different modes within the orange and red channels and the clean having two. There are almost too many features, it has EL34 6L6 Bias selectability, Built in variac and solid state rectifier. Very good effects loop. I uses this amp both in the studio, at home and with my mates in a classic rock covers band and a progreassive 80's rock/metal band.
Sound Quality
:
7
I use this amp primarily with my PRS Custom 24 and a Gibson SG standard, initially it suited my musical styulings very well and i was able to dial in tones similar to a mark IV which is the amp i really wanted but to be honest could not justify paying the money for it. Initially it souned great but as time went on a problem surfaced and one of my resistors had blown causing the volume of the amp to drop from 100 watts to 30 watts. before this the tone lost all of tits bottom end and, wen t tinniy and sounded really lame and brash, i changed the preamp tubes to 12AX7 ELECRO HARMONIX which are better than mesa , but with no joy. i Bought this amp to get a close john petrucci sound and for a while i did but now it sound like a 10 watt peavey practice amp.
Reliability
:
2
I Must say that I hate mesa boogie as a company and the way they deal with overseas customers, buying amps is a little like running a car. I live in london england and here all the techs are very good but all dont really know how to repair mesa boogie circuits as mesa are stingy and difficult and make their circuit diagrams difficult to get a hold of. Furthermore in the uk it costs us #100 to revalve the power section with mesa valves, so at the slightest hint of any problem mesa just say "replace the valves", the problem is we pay twice the price for evereything in the UK. I used to have a dual channel head and even that had its fair share of probelms. MESA BOOGIE are i am afraid not what they once were, they are now more akin to a big corporation and lack the customer care or international service of soldano, bogner or cornford. There is only one liscend mesa boogie repair man in the whole of the south of england and he is an old fart who doesnt know fuck all about sound or amp tone. He just used to fix televisions. Another gripe with mesa is they arent very road worthy, they use the finest leather etc which is all well and good in the showroom and in your bedroom but when you are in a proffessional stage environment or at a rehearsal they are very fragile to superficial cutes in the leather and scratches to the grill. Once again i played mesa exclusivley for 5 years and its taken me this long to realise that sound is not what it is all about. Its all about reliability, customer service and dependebility. My mesa blew fuses all the the time before the TONE WENT SHIT. If u live in America then mesa would be fabulous, but in england we pay twic the price for everything ang get no customer service, mark at westside is sucking his own nob about how mesa boogies never break, but the fact all products are susseptable to breaking.
Customer Support
:
1
CRAPPY, IN THE UK MESA CUSTOMER SUPPORT IS ZERO, YOU may as well be in IRAQ. My buddy playes marshall hand wired series (which is amazing) and he had a slight problem with a faulty pot, and marshall have repair centers and well informed service centers all over the UK. America is fairly far away especially california, and hence if i have a problem i am half way round the world from people who can fix it. If you are buying a chevrolet instead of a bmw in Europe it is gonna be a real headache for maintenence and Parts, same with mesa. I am gonna get it fixed and go back to my trusty marshall tone (different but still an awsome hi gain sound with the JMP1) deftones, Iron Maiden and Dave mustaine all sound pretty decent in metal with marhsall. Mesa isnt the only way in high gain boys and girls! and the marshall factory is only a 2 hour drive from my house.
Overall Rating
:
4
I have played for many years and used and abused, Marshall,Mesa, Randall, Cornford and Fender Amps. MY BIGGEST ADVICE TO ANYONE IS if you live in the UK look for a UK amp manufacturor. I loved the mesa sound but i am selling my Dual Rec for a Marshall EL34 100/100 and jmp 1 rack system. I know mesa is all hand wired and shit but it doesnt mean shit to me, if an amp sounds shit i am not gonna keep it, and after paying close to $3500 for a dual rec, (thats what we pay for em over here with shit service)Marshall and cornford are the best for the English! I cant wait to sell it then i dont have to deal with westside distribution and mesa boogie service reps with too much pride and not enough focus. If u are British Buy British Amps and you will save a lot of hassel.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US endorsed
Submitted 09/12/2005
at 06:00pm
by Ogre
Features
:
10
This amplifier has a ton of cool features. Having this amp for over a year, I am still surprised by the things I am learning about it. I really like the 3 distortion modes (raw, vintage and modern) on the 2 distorted channels. This feature lets you dial in just the right sound for your music. Anything from classic fuzz to bone crushing distortion can be attained! The clean channel has 2 voice selections (clean, pushed) that can be used to take you from crystal clear clean to that early pushed gain sound. The effects loop is really sensitive, so it takes quite a while to figure out the right levels and configurations for using processors. The solo boost on this amp is amazing. There is a spongy/bold selection switch on the back that allows you to go from a warm, classic gain to a really powerful gain that incites feelings of armageddon!
Sound Quality
:
10
Using my Gibson Les Paul Studio, I can get any sound out of this beast. Have played in several genres with this amp, including metal, punk, classic rock, this thing is built to handle any style you can think of! Beware cranking the eq and presence on this thing, because it will give you way more than you are used to with other, lesser amplifiers. I get the best sound out of this thing by keeping all the eq below 12 o'clock, except for treble which I run at 1 o'clock. Without the presence on, you unlock a totally new beast. I am the type of person that really enjoys high gain, no matter what style I am playing, and this amp really does not disappoint in that area. It has gain for days. But when you wanna lower the gain for a more polished sound, it will do that without problem. Having owned most other "high end" brands, I can truly say that this monster crushes them all. I would suggest taking the time to read the manual a few hundred times. There are so many options that you really need to learn before you jump out on stage with this thing. I have owned mine for a year, and I am still learning what this thing can do. Any sound can be achieved from this mammoth beast.
Reliability
:
10
I will admit it, I am too cheap to buy a road case for my amp. But touring all over the United States with my Dual Rec unprotected has not phased it a bit!! It has been through falls, bumps, jiggling, drunk roadies, and STILL cranks out the tunes! I have not changed my tubes since the day it came to me direct from Mesa, and it still purrs like a lion. It has been through many temperature and climate changes, lots of moisture, and came out unscathed! I have total faith in this thing, enough so that I sold my back up amp. Don't need it when this Goliath is built so tough!
Customer Support
:
10
I got mine straight from Mesa as an endorsed artist, and they were great! Never had to speak with them after I received it. I have talked to them about different tubes and how they would change the sound, and they get back to me asap! They are the greatest!
Overall Rating
:
10
After 13 years of touring and owning several other amplifiers, I can say that this is the only thing I will own! I have played other "boutique" amps, and none can hold a candle to Mesa's craftsmanship. As long as you take time to know your amplifier inside and out, you will not find a more versatile amp anywhere. I have owned Fender, Marshall, Budda, VHT, Peavey 5150(total crap), and NOTHING compares to the Dual Rec 3 channel. I have played through a Bogner several times, and after being told they are the best, I was really let down. But my Mesa NEVER lets me down! It never ceases to amaze me. If you want to get the best amp ever made, then I suggest you go out and buy a Mesa Boogie Dual Rec 3 channel!!!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $2,700
Submitted 08/27/2005
at 09:04pm
by Wally
Features
:
10
I bought this amp new in 2005 with the standard 4/12 cab for $2,700. I play mostly hard rock/ heavy metal style music; being influenced by bands such as Tool, In Flames, The Deftones, A Perfect Circle, and Alice In Chains. I'm not too much of a shredder; more of a melodic leader myself. This amp includes three, footswitchable, channels that include clean, overdriven (which can be pretty bad-ass), and the bone-cruching heavy distortion that it's known for. There is no headphone jack, i would imagine because of the amount of power this amp pushes out. I use this amp for everything! Live shows, recording or just for the occasinal jam. For a long time I've been looking for an amp that could produce beautiful, mind-blowing tone, serious bottom end, and the right amount of power to play in any type of condition; outdoor, indoor,etc. I've tried Marshall, Saldano, Line 6, Randall, and Peavy and this amp stood out more than any other.
Sound Quality
:
9
Right now I'm using a Gibson SG fitted with High-output, Burstbucker pick-ups. This amp together with the Burstbucker-fitted SG creates exactly the sound I've been looking for. It has enough heavy gain to crush a small town and still maintains a tone that could make your mother cry. I've found this amp's sound to be consistant at some of the highest volumes. The only problem i've found, really, is that it doesn't sustain that well. For the amount of gain that this thing pushes out, it's pretty damn quiet. For some people the clean channel might not be the greatest sounding but combined with some reverb and delay it's the perfect clean sound for me. I use a Boss digital delay, digital reverb, phase shifter, and flanger. Because this amp has no reverb of its own (which may upset some people) i usually keep the Boss reverb on all of the time. Some people may think this might be a tad risky, however this amp's effects loop is amazing! None of my effects (besides the phaser because I increased the effect's depth) decrease the volume, or the quality of the sound/tone. This may be different with other owners due to the types of effects thy use, but with the ones i have (all Boss), it's perfect. I even use the Delay and Reverb together when playing in channel three!!! and it still maintains tone and volume perfectly!
Reliability
:
10
I've had this Amp for a while now and I've never had one problem with it what so ever.
Customer Support
:
10
I've called up Boogie a few times and everytime All of my questions have been accomidated with the exact answer i was looking for.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing for a little over 7 years and out of all the amps I've tried this one came through with flying colors. If it were lost or stolen i would cry because my pockets can't handle anymore and I would have lost something great. However, i would definately save up for another one. I love everything about this amp. Everything I've stated has been my opinion. Everything this amp has to offer suits me and the sound i wanted to get perfect, however this might be totally the opposite for some people(which you've probably read). My best advice is to try out as many amps as you can because you can't take someone else's opion on something this important and crucial! I, personally, love this amp.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $2200 (with 4/12 cab)
Submitted 07/28/2005
at 02:55pm
by tim
Email: timmyxthexgreat<at>yahoo dot com
Features
:
9
9 'cuz there's no reverb. but you can sorta get a reverby tone out of the amp, and computers can add reverb while recording.. but the thing is.. this amp has VERY good distortion and can be made to be anything from huge low end to blazin' high end solo. when i first got my amp.. a 2005.. i couldn't get the tone i wanted out of it. twitching from the tubes to the diodes makes a bigger change than you would expect. the guy at guitar center said the diodes would be better but i like the rectifier tubes better. i play anything from hardcore to black metal and some death metal. if you get this amp you have to realize you have to be patient. having the gain half a milimeter than it should be will make the distortion sound wak.. basically you just have to mess with the knobs and turn them a tiny bit to make it sound good. if you look in the back of the user manual.. they have a some good sugestions for getting good tones.none of them are in the modern setting but all you do is switch the vintige to modern if you want good low end. if you want a good high end gain then keep it on vintige 'cuz it's got a tighter feel. also.. i strongly suggest that you have the master volume on the indivual channel as low as you can without cutting out that sound and turning up the master volume for the whole amp up. that gives you WAY better tone when playing over drums, or just louder in general. also. i STRONGLY SUGGEST YOU GET A MESA CAB! THEY'RE NOT ONLY A COUPLE INCHES TALLER! (WHICH GIVES MORE BOTTOM END) BUT THE MARSHALL 1960 CAB'S CUT OFF THE GAIN AND THERE'S NO DEBTH AT ALL!! i was going to get a marshall 1960 cab but compared to the meas 4/12 it sounds like ass. too many people just assume marshall makes the best cabs 'cuz they've been around for ever but the mesa cab was just soooo much better. i dont' know about the mode 4 cabs though 'cuz they're taller than the normal marshall cabs. the mesa's also come with casters.
Sound Quality
:
10
GREAT distortion, and i play with en epiphone explorer. it even has pretty good clean sound.. if you go by what the back of the book says for the settings. 'cuz my mother's making me to freakin' jazz band this year.. and playing through this cheap washburn hallow body it doesn't sound half bad for jazz. but i'm not a jazz finatic so it works for me. got a way better clean than marshall's hi gain.
Reliability
:
10
this thing's a tank. the only thing kinda cheasy is the metal bar in the back. but unless someone stuck a knife through the back and broke a tube this thing's indistructable. one of my buddy's got his knocked over in a show and everything still worked after that so yah..
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never delt with them.
Overall Rating
:
10
excelent amp! in my mind the best out there. i've played an assortment of marshalls but none of them had the low end i wanted. this amp will do me for life. the only amp that's played well aslo is the good 'ol 5150, but still not as good of a low end. the orange rockerverb 50 is pretty cool too. but i'd get a dual rec over the orange 'cuz they're cheaper and have good high AND low gain. but if you don't wanta spend that much money.. i'd recoment the 5150 2 or the 6505, both by peavey. but there's payment plans. which is how i got mine.. 'cuz guitar center has the "guitar player's card" or something liek that. when i got it it was no interest for a year. now it's 15 months. but if you don't pay it of in time it's 25% inerest. so yah. hah.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1325 used
Submitted 07/02/2005
at 04:22am
by Ray Baliel
Email: mightymouth at primusonline<dot>com<dot>au
Features
:
8
I have a Dual Rectifier (3 channel) solo head that was made in 2002. I bought is used off Ebay and had it sent to Australia about 18 months ago. I play mainly rock and am very happy with this amp so far. There are many features on this amp and it does take some reading the manual to really get your head around what the amp can do for you and the sound you are after. I love the slave out which I sometimes use. I also love the fact that it has 16, 8 & 4 ohm outs to the speakers that I find very useful. Another feature I really like is the ability to switch to silicon diode (hi power) mode which can really change the sound alot! I can agree with most of the others about the clean channel, but then I didn't buy this amp for the clean channel. The other thing to consider for those who haven't is that you can crank the main output up to get more volume from the clean channel and then turn down on the individual master channels 2 & 3. This way you can balance the volume for all 3 channels if you really get a hard on for the clean channel. The killer feature of this amp is the solo button the foot switch which again can really give you a "fat" sound. Sometimes I use this feature even during rhythm playing.
Sound Quality
:
10
I play all Fender guitars, but really am hooked on my 1983 USA Strat which has a "Seymour Duncan Hotrail" in the bridge position. I am currently using this head through my Laney VC50 combo amp which I am only using the speakers which are HH Premier Vintage 60's and I am getting the hottest sound that I have been looking for in ages. Currently I am using Channel 2 in the modern mode with the following settings to achieve this sound: Presence at about 11:00 O'Clock, Master at about 11:00 O'Clock, Gain at about 1:30 - 2:00 O'Clock, Bass at about 10:00 O'Clock (you may have to adjust this a bit higher as my 1983 strat doesnt have the routing cut of the back of the guitar or the cup jack). Mids at about 11:30 - 12:00 O'Clock and Treble at about 11:00 O'Clock. I tell you, if you don't like this sound then you aren't alive!!. I also have a couple of JV Fenders that sound totally hot on the same settings, but because the pick-ups on the JV's are stock they have a very "Strat" sound. As I mentioned before, you really need to spend some time with these amps to dial up a sound, but once you do, you will never look back!. Channel 3 has the ability to "melt" you and although I like that channel too, I prefer the above settings I detailed.
Reliability
:
10
Well, like many other before me..... these are built like a tank!
Customer Support
:
10
Well hard to say at this stage, but I did call the U.S. and spoke with a technician regarding some questions on the EQ (bass, mids, treble) and found them to be very good at answering my questions. I have never had problems with this amp, so I have to rate it highly in this category over the last 18 months.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing on and off for about 13 years and have owned Marshall's & Fender's previously. I currently own my Dual Rectifier as well as a Laney VC50 which I sometimes slave out of the Dual Rectifier and into the Laney (this is fucking awesome!). I can't stress enough to mess around a fair bit with the amp and different switches/settings to achieve the sound you are after because you WILL find it if you persevere!.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1325 used
Submitted 05/29/2005
at 04:53pm
by James
Email: pekingwoq<at>hotmail dot com
Features
:
5
not sure what year, i think its a 2003 or a 2002, i bought it in 2005.
everyone knows the features, or lack of. 3 channels, 1 clean, 1 mid rangy gain, one high gain. the clean channel sucks, but people dont buy this amp for its clean tone, i know i didnt. no reverb, which is bogus maybe but its not necessary, any recording can have reverb added to it via computer, all live gigs have natural reverb, and you can get a pedal. no big deal.
Sound Quality
:
6
i use an LTD MHB-400 (emg 81 pickups) and a marshall 1960 A lead cab. ive played this amp with a shitload of other guitars, though, including a washburn face eraser, a fender stratocaster, an epiphone gothic flying v, a gibson sg, and an epiphone les paul. the stratocaster sounded like shit for the amount of gain i use, i play death/thrash/melodic metal, and i use a lot of gain. i have the gain on channel 2 set at about 3 o clock. more than that kills note definition and makes it sound hissy as fuck.
here are my problems with this amp:
tone: the lack of tone variety on this amp is astounding. before i bought this amp i talked it up because all these bands use them, and then as soon as i bough it everyone swtiched to the peavey XXX, the peavey 6505(+) and the framus cobra. i cant blame them. i try tons of different settings combinations on the amp and then tone is always the same. if you turn up the treble, you lose low end, if you turn up the low end, you lose treble, and if you turn up the mids, you lose everything. this amp is supposed to be fantastic for getting "your" sound, but its impossible to get that good of a variety, tone wise. the XXX is fantastic and very versatile and i plan on selling my recto for either a XXX or a 6505+.
the distortion on this amp is brutal, but, its a weird kind of distortion in my opinion, its kind of a replica of the first distortion ever; and amp turned so loud it broke up and made shit sound fuzzy and hard to hear. the distorion takes away note definition and does not have good sustain at all. XXX amps have fucking awesome distortion with perfect note definition and sound brutal as fuck.
Reliability
:
10
tank. indestructable.
watch out for blown fuses though, i blew one the other day, not the amps fault, just unplug your amp post-use and let the tubes warm up for a little befroe swtiching the standby off.
Customer Support
:
8
never had to deal with them. i heard they will put any modifications on any mesa FOR FREE if you own the product. that sounds good to me. WARNING: Mesaboogie products are the most sought after products in the world. the company is so backed up right now if your amp breaks you either have to wait 3 months for it to get fixed, or you need to call up and yell at them to do it fast. im giving this an 8 because no one wants to wait 3 months for thier amp to get fixed, and no one wants to be forced to yell at some guy over the phone to get it done faster.
Overall Rating
:
5
this amp is not worth 1699 dollars. with that money i can get a peavey XXX, or a 6505 plus, and an MXR 10 band EQ, a Boss Noise gate, a Boss Chromatic tuner, and a BBE sonic maximizer. the tone is not as versatile as everyone says it is, and would cost 400 dollars less if it didnt have a fat ass grill that says mesa boogie on it. you pay for the name, not the quality. if you have 1700 saved up, wait another month or so and buy a friggin Framus, or a Bogner. or get a XXX or 6505+ and all the shit i listed above. thats a better deal. im giving this amp a 5. it drained my pocket, and dissapointed. dont hesitate to get a traditional recto cab though. they sound fucking fantastic and are the best cabinets out there.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1350 used
Submitted 05/25/2005
at 08:04pm
by Bernhard Buntru
Features
:
9
Year: 2003
Versatility: Excellent, I play mostly punkrock, and it has served its purpose perfectly !
Channels: 3
Features I'd like: as mentioned before by many players, REVERB !!!
I use this amp for gigging, practicing, etc. it has enough power to demolish my house !!! believe it, why do you think the triple doesnt cost that much from the dual ?? because 150 watts of all tube is just TOO MUCH. if you are f*cking Metallica u can consider it, but the DUAL is perfect. believe me
100 W of pure all tube blistering power !!
Im rating it 9 because of the lack of reverb
Sound Quality
:
10
I use seymour duncan distortion pickups, seymour duncan invader and gibson dirty fingers. pure high gain beasts. !!
It suits my music style perfectly, but honestly, I wouldnt recommend it for blues or something that plays mostly on clean sound. This thing is for its distortion not for its clean channel.
Still, I love that it is 2 channels for distortion, you can have trashing satiration in one and little crunch on the other one without sacrificing your clean channel.
Do you rally wanna know how brutal the distortion is ?? JUST READ EVERY REVIEW AND YOULL KNOW.
Reliability
:
10
Ive had it for 3 years and it has never let me down. Of course, you always need to have a couple of fuses just in caseandALAWAYS, ALWAYS ! disconnect it after using.
And yeah, tubes dont last forever so be prepared for spending a hundred bucks on them.
This thing is solid as a horse.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with them (luckily)
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
In my opinion, this is the best amp on earth. But i strongly recommend on trying several other amps, beause this is my hubmle opinion. This may be the best amp for me, but everyone has different taste, so TRY TRY TRY. Most probably u'll go to the store, try this amp and know u found ur soul partner. hope this review was helpful !!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: 2500.00 (After tax) (CAN)
Submitted 05/09/2005
at 11:34pm
by Rory P. Bellows
Features
:
8
-I bought the amp in 2002
-100 watts
-3 channels
-Parallel FX loop (NOT series)
-Solo & FX loop on/off on foot sw
-Variac
-It can take 6L6 or EL34 power tubes
-Selectable tube rectifier or diodes
The FX loop should have had the option for parallel OR series. As it is you can only get 90% wet.
I highly recommend studying the user manual pdf from http://www.mesaboogie.com/manuals/3chRecto.pdf, before you buy.
Sound Quality
:
8
-Used with a Gibson Explorer & a Strat with a humbucker in the bridge
-I did use it with a marshall 412, now I use an 80's PV 412
-I also use it with a Digitech 2112 and a crybaby.
-When the power tubes are driven it gets it's sound
-Channel switching results in loud pops when master is set low
-Very good at classic rock sounds
-The clean sound does break up when you crank the clean channel volume, but it still sounds really good to me
Reliability
:
10
-No problems so far
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
n/a
Overall Rating
:
8
I've been playing 16 years. If it were stolen and the insurance gave me enough money for a Soldano, I would seriously consider it. If you want serious "chug" this your amp.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1,400.00 approx
Submitted 03/30/2005
at 07:07am
by Anonymous
Features
:
4
I am the owner of a 2001 Mesa Dual Rectifier (3 Channel) with matching 4x12 cab (not the oversized bass beast). This amp, in my humble opinion is made for one thing: Nu Metal! It is not the versatile amp I was hoping it would be. The channels: Channel 1 (clean) is probably the most dissappointing of them all - with very little headroom and the clean sound only a chainsaw operator could love, it is almost useless. Channel 2 (Orange) is the channel I use the most in VINTAGE mode with gain no higher than 1pm. This channel has an amazing lack of sustain and harmonic complexity. Channel 3 (Red) - Mostly used in MODERN mode, it is loud and is the modern gain type channel - it too lacks sustain and is not versatile. The amp is buzzy, not tight on the low end and basically one trick pony. Anyone that tells you differently has NO IDEA what they're talking about (Or you need to question their motives for giving a glowing review). If you like CREED and want to pund away on chords all day long, this is the amp for you. Anything else and look for another amp to buy!
Sound Quality
:
5
I use an Ibanez 770 as my main guitar equiped with stock Dimazio pick-ups. I also use a modified Fender Strat with SD Customs in it. I play mostly 80's era hard rock and need an amp that is made for shredding...THIS IS NOT THE AMP FOR SHREDDING! It is the amp for Drop D chord bashing and nothing else. As I mentioned, no sustain, no harmonics and a flubby low end that turns everything to mush. If you want to get lost in the mix (not cut through in the band), then get this amp...otherwise find another amp!
Reliability
:
10
It's built like a tank...no problems there. It's as sturdy as they come.
Customer Support
:
10
Great...again, this ain't the problem
Overall Rating
:
4
I've been playing for 23 years (almost all of it professional). I am mostly a guitar to amp guy, no effects to speak of...
The bottom line: Not made for playing lead, flubby bass response, no sustain, harmonics are no where to be found, etc.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1,500
Submitted 03/27/2005
at 08:55pm
by Crazy Nate
Features
:
9
I bought this amplifier in 2001, so it is now 4 years old. I've waited 4 years to post a review about it, and now I feel like I can safely say that, aside from the circuitry, I know this amplifier like the back of my hand. I play with a band professionally, we gig, and I have this amp at home for practicing and recording, and I mostly play modern rock. A Perfect Circle, Linkin Park, Story of the Year, Incubus, Audio Slave, Tool, Filter, Pillar...you get the picture. I also play alot of classic good old rock and roll (Hendrix, Led Zep etc), as well as some heavier stuff (Black Label Society, Kittie, etc.) and this amp works great for all of these styles. The features are all you will really ever need in an amplifier. In fact, It's not simple, but its not too complicated. I find the more complicated an amp gets, the more it takes away from the sound. If you play rock, this amp gets the prize. If you play jazz or softer, you might find the Mesa's legendary gain overpowering or to much.
This amp has 3 channels (clean, rythm, lead) and all of them have their own flavor. The effects loop works great, no headphone jack though (If you only have the option of low volume, bear in mind that this amp starts sounding really good at mid volume levels. The low volume levels of gain still sound cool with their own kind of tone, but when the tubes start to get hot is when the amp kicks you in the gut and brings you to a level of sonic power I'll never forget). Plenty powerful, even if you play at HUGE gigs (I'm talking crowds of upwards to thousands of people) you probably won't be playing at more then half power anyways, because you WILL be mic'd up.
Features are great.
Sound Quality
:
9
Ok, so I'll give a cheap first guitar, a mid-range, and an awesome. I use an Ibanez GSA60 (cheap first guitar) a Schecter C-1 (mid-range) and my custom beefed up strat replica (awesome). And, a little note I must make, PRS guitars...they just sound ridiculously good on these amps, I don't know why, but you see it alot these days and that is proof. On all of these guitars, it sounds great. The cheaper guitars (crappier pickups) can be made to sound like a guitar that costs at least double the price, which is great, because after you buy this amp with the cab, you might find yourself short on cash. This amp tends to have a little hum to it on the distortion channels, but the amp suits all the musical styles I play. A drawback: If you are looking for a great sparkling clean, this high gain monster is a little lacking. The clean distorts easily, and just doesn't have that sparkle. But, lucky for you, you're buying this because you want a sword that can cut through sonic landscapes like smoke, so the distortion is plain and simple: best damned and most versatile distortion EVER. I like Marhsalls and Mesa's, but the Marshalls distortion seemed to be a little to squeally and less full to me. I've used this amp for a long time, there just isn't anything like it...it is awe inspiringly powerful.
Bottom lines: The clean isn't anything special, if you want amazing clean, buy a Marshall Plexi (not a reissue), or a Fender Bassman. The distortion is enough to make you drop to your knees in awe, and/or move you to tears with pure sonic power.
Reliability
:
10
This amp is also INCREDIBLY dependable. These, like many others will say, are built like a tank. No need for a backup, it has never failed me once. The Dual Rec. has never ever let me down.
Customer Support
:
10
Great customer support. The company is getting bigger though, so in the future (I pray this doesn't happen) they might become like Marshall product support, or worse...Digidesign...eehh, makes me shiver at the thought.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've compared this to all the Marshalls, Line 6, Fender, Ibanez, Randall, and Soldano amplifiers, and this one takes the cake in my opinion. The important thing is to try all the amplifiers that you can to find out which one you like best, don't just take my advice or anyone elses, see for yourself. I'll have this amplifier the rest of my life, if it was stolen I'd probably track the thief down and beat him with a very large cinder block and steal his sneakers. Oh, and there is alot of hype about this new amp from Mesa, the Stilleto. It sounds good...but in my opinion, nowhere near as good as the Dual Rec.
Overall: Best sounding most versatile rock guitar amplifier.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1700
Submitted 03/16/2005
at 09:44pm
by Tim
Features
:
9
it's a 2005. It's the best amp if you want good distortion. The three channels kick ass if you want one channel to be super high gain and the other channel to have a good low gain sound. The footswitch works pretty well. The first few times i was using it there was this popping noise but that went away after about the second day. 100 watts of all tube is enough to play any decent size gigs. The triple rec is overkill in my opinion unless you're playing a large venue. I play hardcore with my band and we've never played that large of shoes, mostly in clubs and such, and a triple rec would be overkill, which i never thaught i'd say, but ya. I gave it a nine because no reverb, and i'm in debt now because i didn't have enough money to pay for the cab i got, so i hadta get it on a guitar center card with no intrest for a year, which is a good deal, but if you get over the year you're pretty much screwed, so i couldn't afford a reverb petal for a while.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use a epiphone explorer with standard pick-ups, it's not as fancy as all these other guys guitars but hey, it gets the job done and i'd rather have a sick amp like this than a killer guitar and a shitty amp. I play mostly hardcore and metalcore and this amp suits me perfect. The only lame part is the pushed channel on the first channel doesn't really get very distorted, and to me, it's a pretty good clean, hell, my dad who likes neil young and that shit was playing on it. Last, the distortion kicks ass. If you want amp with the high gain distortion, get this, it's the best i've played, and there's a lot of variety of sounds, anything from super high gain like old converge, to low ends like sinai beach.
Reliability
:
10
nothings ever broke or gotten messed up
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
10
it's a great amp!!!! it's expensive but it's worth it. but if you're gona spend that much on the head, you need a good cab. I got mine at guitar center and i was gona get this used marshall 1960 cab that sounded like ass. IT just killed the tone out of the head. I ended up spending some more mula and geting a mesa rectifier cab that was on sale because the model was discontinued and the distortion became full again. <B>I don't get how so many people run this head through a marshall 1960 cab, they sound like ass. That is unless you want distortion with no bottom end.</b> Maby it was a dud cab but i doubt it. Well the moral of this story is <B>GET A MESA CAB!!!</b> the cabs are specifically built for the head so you know they're gona sound better than the other cabs.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1700
Submitted 02/12/2005
at 04:37pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
8
The features are simple enough. im not gonna relist what everyone else has put.
Sound Quality
:
8
I bought this amp in early 2002. and its been through hell with me ever since.
alot of players seem to think that once they have this head theyre all set. YOU MUST HAVE A GOOD CABINET! i repeat YOU MUST HAVE A GOOD CABINET! when i first got it i was playing it through this awful jackson cab that i had bought for like $125 bucks a few years earlier. in 2003 i joined this band and they demanded i buy a marshall cab. and im happy i did. ive since replaced 2 of the stock G12T75's with vintage 30's. that has made it sound even better. this amp may not be as completely rich in harmonics as a soldano SLO-100, but its damn close. i highly reccommend buying a marshall cab and experimenting with speakers. those rectifier cabs sound like ASS so dont even think about it.
i play metal/hardcore so this amp gets the job done great. its loud and heavy. and its got great tone. i knew it could do a little better, so i bought an ibanez tube screamer TS-9 and it REALLY brought out alot of bite and heavy attack.
i know this amp can do alot more than the heavy rock you see it for 99% of the time. its also a great amp for rock and country.
the only thing i wouldnt use this amp for is anything where youre gonna need great clean tone. this amp just doesnt have it. only a blackface is a blackface. maybe with some kind of modeler it might sound better, but alone the clean channel just isnt great.
I ALMOST FORGOT ABOUT TUBES!!
do not use groove tubes in this. if you do, i will punch you. either use mesa's tubes (tubes made by other companies that mesa tests and relabels. more expensive but worth it) or really look into what your options are on www.tubestore.com i highly reccommend Electro Harmonix's 6L6GC. thats what i use and its amazing. the most harmonically rich tone i have tried. and trust me i have had so many different kinds of 6L6 and EL34 in this head its rediculous.
the facts in short:
groove tubes are garbage
mesa tubes are great but expensive
this player prefers electro harmonix
groove tubes are garbage
groove tubes are garbage
Reliability
:
10
this amp has taken a beating and a half and has always worked. ive had it serviced just to keep it going strong but there was nothing wrong with it. dude just strengthened up some of the solder joints, and re tubed it.
Customer Support
:
10
funny story - i used to work for a collection agency and i hated my job and no matter how hard i tried they wouldnt fire me. i used to just call mesa and ask them all kinds of weird shit. THESE PEOPLE KNOW WHAT THEYRE TALKING ABOUT. i assure you. they can answer every question you throw at them and i tried like crazy to think of some real good ones.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1599
Submitted 02/06/2005
at 03:59pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
9
You know the features. Not having reverb is a bit tacky for such an expensive amp.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use a 2002 PRS McCarty and a 92 Strat. I have a variety of pedals of which only 3 or 4 are used at any one time. The effects loop cuts the output volume, and with the effects I use, I notice no difference running the pedals in front of the amp (other than the volume of course). The clean channel is very good for my tastes; slight brekup only at the higher gain and volume settings. Channel 2 is my main channel for general distortion, set to vintage. Channel 3 is capable of cool overdrive to the proverbial "rip your face off" distortion. People that can't seem to get good sounds out of these amps either aren't trying hard enough or haven't read the instructions. I have changed the stock 6L6 tubes to some EL34's and the diiference, albeit slight, is enough to make a difference in top end clarity. I've also pulled the two middle power tubes to run the head at 50w. With the mesa 4x12 cab, even at 50w, it's loud enough for permanent hearing damage in short periods of time. I have a 2000 Marshall DSL 100 head that I A/B'ed with the mesa, and using the vintage setting and el34's, I've produced sounds that are extremely "Marshallesque." The verstility of this amp is astounding. It gets a bad rap because every nitwit-nu-metal clone has the gain set at 10 and the mids at 0. The mid knob is your friend; it will give you tone.
Reliability
:
10
I've had it for a little over 6 months and it has never failed. And this is also running it on only 2 power tubes. Inevitably fuses and tubes will go with time, but the amp itself is very solid.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't had to deal with them.
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for about 10 years now and I've tried a lot of equipment. The dual rec is a keeper and is now my main gigging amp. There are adavantages and disadvantages to every amp made. For me, the dual rec has the most positives with the fewest negatives. If it were stolen I would go into debt to buy another one immediately. If it had reverb and a better effects loop, it would be a 10 hands down. Buy one. You won't be dissapointed.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US endorsed
Submitted 01/23/2005
at 09:09pm
by Butcher
Features
:
10
The head features 3 channels. The 2 distortion channels have 3 separate modes of gain you can choose from, taking you from old rock to new levels of intensity! The clean channel has 2 separate modes of operation as well, allowing you to go from a traditional clean to a pushed dirty clean. Each channel has it's own separate eq, allowing for a variety of tone variations between channels. Of course like all amps, you have to spend time with it to find the right tone for you. Also I would recommend throwing the cheap chinese tubes away, and investing in some NOS or at least svetlana tubes. The back panel of this amp looks like a science fiction movie!! There are so many options in sound, effects loop, bias, preamp out. The footswitch has 3 buttons for the 3 channels, a button that turns the effects loop on and off, and one is a solo boost. For the money, this is a great quality head to buy!
Sound Quality
:
10
I run a Gibson Les Paul Studio straight into this beast. In close quarter rehearsal settings, higher volumes cause feedback when not playing, but then again, with this much power and gain, do you expect anything less? At reasonable volumes, there is no noise whatsoever! Quiet as a church mouse. The gain from this monster is amazing. No signal clipping at the highest settings. The chinese 6L6s sound a bit flat, but thanks to the bias select switch on the back, you can lose those things and get some good EL34s! DEFINATELY CHANGE THOSE TUBES TO GET A BETTER TONE!!!
Reliability
:
10
I ordered mine straight from Mesa, have had it about 8 months, and this thing has not failed me yet! It has been through shows in several states, been abused by insane stage antics, banged around by careless roadies, and it STILL plays like new. I don't even use a case for it, because the thing is built so tough. Sure, I plan on buying a shock mounted case for it eventually, but that is just for flight purposes. If you want a reliable amp built like a tank, this is the amp for you!
Customer Support
:
10
I had to deal with customer service a bit as they were slammed when my order was placed. Being that I was not a major artist, my order was given away to Cradle of Filth. They of course built me a new one, and it took a while, but they stayed helpful and friendly until it was finally in my possession. And since my order was given away, they sent me freebies!!! Who doesn't like free stuff?
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I have been playing for 14 years, and have played many amps over my career. I have played marshall, peavey, line 6, crate, carvin, vht, yet none of them were able to deliver the aggressive sound that the dual rec has. If someone stole this amp, after crying for a while, I would get 2 more to replace it. I cannot see myself playing ANYTHING but a dual rec for the rest of my days. Just a side note, if you play a Les Paul like I do, you will agree, this is the ONLY amp worthy of your Gibson! The sounds you will have will greatly move you to the bottom of your soul! GO BUY ONE ALREADY!!!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1499
Submitted 01/16/2005
at 04:23pm
by Mike
Features
:
8
I got the amp in July of 2004. Played a show with it the following weekend. It takes a bit of work to figure out how to tweak sounds to your liking, but once you get it down, you can get some amazing tones out of it. I think it's plenty versatile for the average guitarist's needs. Some might like a fourth channel, but I think three is plenty. Built in reverb would be nice, but it's not necessary.
Sound Quality
:
9
I play a Gibson Les Paul Studio into this, using the Standard Recto 4x12 cab. I have a Deluxe Memory Man, Vox Wah, and Boss ME-50 going through the FX loop. The clean isn't the cleanest, but I prefer it a little gritty anyway. Channel 2 I use as my lead channel, instead of channel 3. Channel 3 is my crunch.
The sounds I get are amazing. The distortion on this thing reminds me of the sound of little kids getting their heads ripped off. My band's songs require a wide range of guitar sounds, from clean, melodic parts to crushing distortion and a nice crunch in the middle...and this thing can handle those needs with no problem.
Reliability
:
9
I've had it for six months now with no problems. I've played at least a half dozen shows with it and used it at home at least twice a week. Aside from the normal disadvantages of tube amps (tubes going bad, etc.), I can't imagine anything going wrong with it. The construction is solid.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never used it, although the warranty is great and I've heard great things about the customer service.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I've been playing for about 8 years now and this is the best piece of equipment I've ever owned. The sound may not be for everyone...all I can say is use your own best judgment to find what you think sounds good to you. But if you like the Recto sound, I'd definitely recommend getting it. Of course, there's times when I wonder if I should get a Diezel or Bogner or Framus in the future, but then I turn on my Recto, crank it up and remember why I forked over $1500 for it in the first place.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1500
Submitted 12/31/2004
at 05:16pm
by Mike
Features
:
9
Enough features to keep me busy for a freaging year. damn this thing is loaded with features, the only thing is, i wish they made different face plates and have them more easily accesible. the metal faceplate looks ugly to me, espeicialy after seeing it over and over.
Sound Quality
:
10
i have an epiphone les paul custom with emg 81s and a fender 1950s telecaster as my main guitars. i play a style similar to the used, finch, incubus, and tool. (
this goes to the kid who said crate tones fit finch and incubus's sound better) hey kid.. finch and incubus both use mesa, not crate.
the gain is well over the ammount that anyone will ever need. i only turn it up about half way. its amazing how bad this amp can sound if you dont know the characteristics of it. i was really dissapointed in it when i first bought it because i wasnt able to get a sound i really liked at first. but months later i love the thing to death, its amazing how much variety of tone this thing has.
Reliability
:
9
ive used this in a few gigs, nothing went wrong. this thing is built really strong.
just bring extra tubes and youll be fine.
Customer Support
:
10
mesa has the most excellent customer support. what amp company calls you after you purchase their amp just to say "welcome to the family." and ask if you have any questions about it. ive never had a phone call like that from any other company.
Overall Rating
:
9
overall this amp is awesome, if your into metal, punk, or even country. this amp will do you good. just wish it came stock with el 34s
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1150 used
Submitted 12/29/2004
at 05:08pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
3 channels, it's all been said... I really like the amount of features on this amp which allows for great versitilty.
Sound Quality
:
8
I've used this amp with alot of diffrent guitars playing lots of styles. (Godin Flat Five, USA Strat, Ric 330...) I found this amp to have useable sounds for just about everything. Using the switches and eq I could get it all. This doesn't mean they were all amazing but where for sure useable. Also, an separate eq and a reverb pedal really step this amp up several notches. Having the extra control from the eq really helps. Which out it it is a bit hard to dial in but is good once you find the sweet spots. I used it mostly for harder stuff (Chevelle, Blindside..) and I liked it. I've found that a good cab is a must have.
Reliability
:
10
I gigged with it for about a month and have had no problems with it. I run it with the master about half way up which is pretty dang loud (channel 1 vol at 5 oclock, 2 channel at around 3 and the 3ed channel at 12 oclock) so I would guess pushing it that hard that much would help it break if it was. No problems.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
8
I've been playing 7 or 8 years and have played alot of other gear. I like this amp but am getting an up grade. I've got the money so I'm going a step up, something in the Bogner, Framus, Engl range...Good amp for a good used price but I can't really see paying 1500 or whatever for a new one. I'm giving it an 8 because compared to higher end amps it falls a bit short.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/10/2004
at 07:57am
by Lee (mesa is betta)
Features
:
10
Sound Quality
:
10
Reliability
:
10
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
Take heed...
Anyone who can stand up and say truthfully that these amps sound band/terrible/awful need themselves examining. This amp gets better through experience and using the fucking thing rather than just complaining that it doesnt sound like a Marshall (which are shit anyway) and bitching that you cant get a good sound out of it.
The only bad sounds in this amp are the ones that are dialled in by inexperienced guitarists who do not really have the first idea of what constitutes a good guitar sound. Playing in a store is no good either. Let me tell you if you are considering buying this amp then go ahead and purchase it you cannot regret it.
People that get the results from this amp know how to use it and have more than likely got a bit of sense about themselves.
if you are frustrated with the sound of your Rectifier here are some suggestions which may help.
1. run the amp at 50 watts. The perceived volume difference between 50 watts and 100 watts is hardly noticable, but running the amp at 50 watts by pulling out the two center power tubes and one of the rectifier tubes will add harmonic content to your sound when turning up the volume.
2.Set the variac switch to spongy giving a looser feel to the amp and set the rectifier to valve/tube.
3. Dont scoop the mids!!!! Keep them quite a bit above half. It amazes me how many people think that for a metal sound they have to scoop the mids. This is so wrong. A good metal sound in my opinion is something that sounds downright filthy, think Daron Malakian from System Of A Down's first album before he started with all that Mode 4 crap. That to me is an awesome metal sound and i would bet my bottom dollar that he set his amp up like i am explaining. Obviously it was a Boogie too.
4. Keep the individual channel masters a bit below half, balance up the sounds from each channel keeping them a bit below half this keeps the clarity.
5. Use the amp loud and live. Open up the overall master volume for some seriously sick guitar sounds (at least past half)
6. Use a Mesa cab! Tried using it wit a mARSEshall- v. poor
7.try this setting for a really aggresive modernish Malakianish crunch/grind that is still good for solos
Gain 7.5
Bass 8.5
Mid 7.5
Treble 5.5
Presence 3
Channel Vol. 4.5
Mode Vintage
Channel 3
set up similar sounds for all of the channels by using a more mid, less treble approach. your guitar's sound sits in the middle frequency of a band situation. Cymbals etc taking up the high end and Bass Guitar and Kick drum taking up the Low end. why set your tone up with loads of bass, loads of treble and then scoop the mids??? I fucking hate stupid Fucks that set their amps up like this. All this causes is your guitar to clash with the high end and low end space that everyone else is sitting in. the MID FREQUENCY IS WHERE YOUR GUITAR SHOULD BE!! USE YOUR FUCKING MIDDLE EQ CONTROL AND TURN IT UP MORE THAN YOU ARE USING IT NOW TO BE HEARD AND HAVE A PUNCHY, AGGRESIVE GUITAR SOUND THAT SITS IN THE MIX WITH A BAND (IT MAY SOUND ODD IN THE BEDROOM! FOR ALL YOU WANNABE'S OUT THERE!) IN THE MIDDLE OF A SONIC SPECTRUM IS WHERE A GUITAR SHOULD BE SO PLEASE PUT IT THERE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
P.S. This amp is the best amp i have ever owned, it caters for every possible style of music, it looks cool, it sounds amazing, it is not a one trick pony, its hand made and its a million times better than all of those horrid amps out there that tend to be black and gold, and have eight lettered names in a white script font.
There... My two cents worth!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/09/2004
at 06:43am
by Some guitar player
Features
:
No Opinion
everything u need and way to much more
Sound Quality
:
5
Ok everyone needs to snap out of this dual recto hype im not sayin its a bad amp it just doesnt sound like 1500 dollars mybe 900 to 1000 but thats it anyway i bought this new crate bv150 its the 150 watt version of the bv300 which i dont understand who the hell needs 300 watts hell i dont even need 150 really but anyway this new crate is definitly worth what u pay for, its 1200 dollars, sounds better than a dual recto thats for sure and has a little more tone options u might say but anyways just a thought try it and see wat u think dont get me wrong other crates sound like shit with some exceptions by the way i play finch type stuff, Taking back sunday, rage, and of coarse weezer and incubus two of the most brilliant bands out there
Reliability
:
9
well they r built like a damn bomb shelter which is good, Hell they should of went ahead and made a bullet proof kevlar dust cover for it then there aint nothin that could stop this shit
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
they better support there customers 1 year warranty's come get the fuck outta here i want at least a 3 year and also that crate has a 5 year warranty which i feel more secure with
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
N/A
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1050.00 used
Submitted 12/07/2004
at 09:20am
by michael
Features
:
9
This is the 3 channel version. I find it hard to give anything a 10, but this is as close to it as possible. It has so many features that let you dial in a sound it is amazing. On the back there is even more options. Read the site for specifics. Downfall is that this amp needs a type of power selector to play with less watts.
Sound Quality
:
9
VERY IMPORTANT, this amp sounds best loud. I have said it. At first I wasn't altogether satisfied with the tones, but when I really cranked it , it sounded great. I play many different styles and use this in a studio for others to use. I think that it is great with single coils and humbuckers. Yes, this is great for really heavy stuff, like Zao, Killswitch engage, etc., but is also wonderful for blues, and clean. I will play with the gain on about 4, master at 6, and power section on about 4-7 and get a great overdriven distortion. It is clean really loud to, which is a bonus for live playing. I use it wilh a mesa 4-12 straight cab with celestion vintage 30's.
Reliability
:
9
so far,so good
Customer Support
:
9
in the past i have had success with mesa
Overall Rating
:
9
I have been playing for about 10 years, have recorded with two separate groups and played live numerous times. This is a great head for me in all situations. I would buy a second if i could. I do wish i could have a power setting to not have to get so loud with it though. I compared it to many other amps that i would have been satisfied with, i just thought that i could get more seperate sounds out of this, and so far have been happy.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/17/2004
at 05:04pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
8
Built in 2002 this amp has served me well for a full year. You know the features.
What should it have? Reverb would be nice, as would a true master volume for all three channels. But from what I read the implement of a main master volume would effect how the channels effect each other.
Sound Quality
:
8
Read your manual people! Having worked in a music store I realize first hand that the majority of people that complain about the sound of this amp sucks is related to a lack of knowledge on how to use the thing. Sure there are people out there that this amp is NOT built for (blues players for example) and I don't recomened it for them.
To get a good sound out of this amp I read the manual, used some of the sample settings and played with them to get MY sound. And my clean channel sounds excelent! My EQ is set to 12:00 on mid, bass, and trebel, and a bit of pressance can go a long way.
I was unhappy with the distorted tones of the second channel at first. I use it for low gain and just felt that the 6L6's didn't open up enough. I replaced the tubes with EL34's thanks to the built in bias switch and went back to work. The distortion got more saturated, sustained, and just crunchier. Exactly what I was looking for.
The third channel is pretty much set to eleven... I love screaming rock!
It's not that I play in a hard metal hair band either, I play in an alt rock band. www.rolodexmusic.net
Guitars being used: Epi ES335 with Burstbucker and 500T, Epi SG w/Seymour Duncan Super Distortions, Fender Tele Custom. Sounds good with everything.
Before the final verdict is produced.... BEWARE OF THE EFFECTS CHAIN! Even with trem and flange the only effects in my loop chain, when you trigger the FX using the floor board, the volume level almost halfs. You can't change the output knob on the front of your amp without effecting your base tone either! I checked with other amp owners and found the same problem.
Reliability
:
5
no comment
Customer Support
:
9
Good guys to deal with, the mesa rep was a great source of information.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1,500
Submitted 10/17/2004
at 07:38pm
by Frank
Email: sithrik<at>si dot rr dot com
Features
:
10
You have heard it all already; 3 channels from clean to super heavy gain. No reverb, great effect loop, many more features. 100 watts, slave out, clean channel switching (no noise).
Sound Quality
:
10
Many people have complained about the clean channel and how no one buys this amp for that purpose, but I believe that for $1,500 you better have the total package. It does take quite a bit of tweaking, especially with the presence, but I got a great Fender-like clean out of it. The other two channels are pretty much the same. I use one for more of a vintage rock-roll sound and the other for brutal distortion (you know, the one this amp is famous for). I play many styles of music which is why I love the versatility of the head. I mostly use a 1978 Fender Strat modified with a DeMarzio super distortion in the bridge position. I have several other guitars, but they all sound great through this head. I can play everything from Jazz (I use a Holy Grail reverb in the effects loop) to Death metal with this rig (I also have the matching rectifier cabinet to go with it. I run my guitar through a Clyde Deluxe wah, Boss Flanger, and a Boss dd-5 Delay pedal. I find it better to run these in line rather than through the loop. The gain of this amp can be a bit much when run through the effects, so I find it better to modify the signal before the gain.
Reliability
:
10
No problem yet, I have had it over a year.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I have never had to call them, but everone I know who did got quite a bit of help. Since I myself have not had to call I will not rate this section.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing for over 20 years. I have used Marshalls, Crates, Line 6s, and several other amps. This is one of the best ever. Every high-end amp has its own personality and the beauty is in the ear of the beholder, but I do feel this is quite the complete package especially for someone looking for versatility. I do wish it had reverb, so the only thing I can really compare it to is the Marshall JCM2000. It really comes down to the whole Marshall vs. Boogie thing which is a matter of personal preference. If this were lost or stolen I would definitely replace it with one just like it.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 10/14/2004
at 08:08pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
9
This amp was hand made in Calafornia. It is very versatile from muddy blues to screaming leads.
Sound Quality
:
9
This amp has beautiful tone. I am astounded that anyone would give this amp a 1 on sound quality. It's ridiculous. This amp is one of the higher priced amps in it's class, and they have sold alot. I find it funny that people would be stupid enough to keep buying these amps at this high price if they didn't deliver. And They Are Hand-Made!
Anyways there are three channels on this amp. The first channel is for clean and crunch tones. It doesn't have the headrooom of a Fender Twin, but it isn't supposed to. The clean sounds pretty good and occasionally I like to crank the gain and the volume to get this rank yet beautiful natural tube overdrive. The second channel lends itself to mid crunchy tones beautifully.(listen to rythem guitar on Alive by Pearl Jam) It is a beatiful distortion and can stand up to any marshall on stage, i've personally done it. The third channel I mainly use for a solo channel to cut through the mix.
Reliability
:
10
I fully feel that I can depend on this amp. I gig without a backup because you can easily play this amp with 2 power tubes.
Customer Support
:
10
Mesa customer supportt is amazing, that's all I have to say.
Overall Rating
:
9
Grreat Amp
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1400
Submitted 10/05/2004
at 10:12am
by Anonymous
Features
:
8
pretty versitile, 3 channels, vintage, raw and modern settings. ss or tube rectifier, spongy or bold setting, more features then marshalls do.
Sound Quality
:
1
Me and 4 of my freinds worked all summer and all bought brand new dual rectifiers, mesa diamand plate 4x12 recto cabs and prs custom 24's w/ 10 tops and birds (nice!). I replaced the tubes immidiatly with jj/tesla 6L6 power tubes and 12AX7 preamp tubes, improved sound considerably, I was expecting some good tone, boy was I wrong! Three channels, clean channel makes my 10w ss crate practice amp sound like a '65 fender twin reverb, the mid gain channel (channel 2) sounds kinda like a marshall hotrodded jcm 800......after being dropped off a cliff! No sustain, even when cranked up to 6-7! The high gain channel is pure grainy fuzz crap (almost sounds like ss), this thing has no tone at all! I play hardcore/metal and I'm ashamed of my sound! People always go "whoa!" when they see me dragging in a mesa, when I turn it on and start playing it they usually just walk away, cause it's so overrated. I've been messing with the settings for the past 2 months trying to get even a mediocre tone and just isn't there.
Reliability
:
6
it reliably sounds like crud. other then that nothing has gone wrong with it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with them, I sure wish they would build dual rectifier that actually sounds good!
Overall Rating
:
1
Mesa must be paying alot of people to use there crappy amps, I sold my head a week ago, planning on buying either a marshall dsl 100 or a bogner ubershall. two of my freinds have already bought dsl 100's and are getting much better tone. I think the fact is most people think because they see so many guys using mesa's they just think they're good and once they buy them they just get used to that sound and get defensive everytime somebody tells them how crappy they sound.
I wish it was stolen when I had it, that would've been a miracle.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1599
Submitted 09/17/2004
at 03:50am
by Sina Al-Rais
Features
:
9
Mine's a 2003 triple channel solo head. I don't play a wide variety of music but the amp itself is so versatile that you can do so many different things with it. It's 100% tube tone (with the option of solid-state rectification instead).I typically play rock / hard rock upto metal and the Dual Recto certainly delivers. As everybody else has already said, it's got 3 channels - 1 clean, 2 distorted channels - but I prefer the Orange distortion channel in a band situation typically (its generally less fuzzy than the Red Channel and compliments my second guitarist's rig better). It would have been nice to have some reverb but the FX loop is great so that makes up for it. The solo function of the head (to allow for an immediate boost in volume when required) is without a doubt an extremely useful feature of the amp and is just such a great idea. The amp is damn loud also, so it can be hard to crank.
Sound Quality
:
9
The amp has so many sounds in it that it's really difficult to dial in the sound you want (even though I've had this amp for almost a year and didn't want to review it until I had used it sufficiently). I use an Ibanez RG770FM and the pup's aren't overly hot, but with slightly hotter pickups such as my friend's Duncan JB or Dimarzio Tone Zone, the amp distortion really smokes. That isn't too say that the stock pups on my guitar are bad (I like them a lot) but hotter pickups certainly give a more full sound. Warning: You will not get a good distortion sound out of it unless u crank it until at least 25%... anything less than that is just buzz. Some people complain that the FX loop seems to make the amp more fizzy... in my experience this isnt the case and as long as the amp has sufficient volume going through it, it sounds fine. However since the amp is so loud, turning up the master volume past 25% can be a problem. The speaker cable used to connect the head to the cab is important also (make sure its a speaker cable not an instrument cable like people are often conned into! It actually makes a HUGE difference and instrument cables will damage the amp). My cleans are generally set for a spanking-clean kinda sound (you can't get Fender cleans out of a Mesa obviously though), the orange distortion channel can get a really nice Marshall-esque boogie town, and the red channel provides the well-known Mesa all out high gain distortion. If you crank the amp, you won't need ridiculous amounts of gain. The amp can get quite bassy.
Reliability
:
10
Well since it's a tube amp it's always best to have spare tubes, but I've used the amp at two gigs (without a backup) and had no issues. Treat it well and you won't have any problems.
Customer Support
:
8
I haven't properly dealt with Mesa/Boogie but I once sent a general question about the amp via their website... it took them around 2 weeks to respond. However I don't live in the US so maybe it's just their international services that aren't so hot!
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for over 3 years, and this is now my main amp, and would recommend that anyone should try out the amp at a respectable volume in order to see whether they like it or not. In truth it sounds very similar to bands that use the amp on commercial album's so as a general idea of what the amp sounds like, merely listen to a band that uses them. However, it's extremely versatile and can do a wide variety of styles of music, so don't believe that since the majority of nu-metal/pop/mainstream rock bands use them that they're only good for super high-gain. The price is rather high, but then again since I haven't had any problems with it and like the sound of it, I can't say that it wasn't worthwhile. Mesa should fix their prices in Europe however, because they're absolutely insane!! (almost three times the cost of it in the US, which is why i bought my amp from Chicago). If it were stolen or lost I'd be tempted to try out other amps first before buying it again (just to experiment with new sounds and amps obviously) but if I had another spare $1500 then I'd buy it again!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1566.00
Submitted 09/02/2004
at 09:40am
by Stephan
Email: vavasssc at gene<dot>com
Features
:
10
year-2000
The mesa works great! for the style of music we play: Hardcore (Madball/Terror/All out war/By my will etc.)You will also find it is very versitile for other sounds & types of music.
This amp comes with 3 channels (1-Clean/2-80's Rock/3-GOD LIKE!)
I use the effect loop for a Flanger, excellent option keeping pedals off the floor. As far as features I wish it had? Well, maybe a chorus/reverb options would have been cool on the clean channel- no big deal, a pedal can remedy that.
As most know(Should know)Its an all tube amp (4-Power tubes-6L6 or EL34 choice) (2-Rectifier Tubes with the option to switch to solid state)
Sound Quality
:
9
I use an ESP Viper 400 with EMG 81 Pickups. 11 Guauge strings.(Not to twangy no too muddy- just right!) ADVICE for that someone who has a Recto and is experiencing some frustration on getting a great sound.
I have a check list for you!
FIRST-Make sure you have a good Quality Guitar w/great pickups(Seymours/EMG etc.)Guitars? I suggest (ESP/LTD) (Epiphone) (Schecter) The Price is decent & they are all setup with quality items(with the exception of pickups-depends if they come with quality ones-dont buy it if not). If you have a Recto, you obvioulsly can get a Guitar (If not! use your damn credit card & spend $700).
SECOND-What kind of cab are you using, it matters, I use a 4x12 Peavey MS cab, I get the sound I am happy with. Some use Marshall cabs, or even the cab the amp is designed for the mesa cab. Cabs give different sounds (Crisp/Deep/Crappy etc.) Just dont use a cheap homemade cab with Jensens speakers (Yes I have seen it!)
THIRD- EDUCATE YOURSELF ON TUBE TECHNOLOGY!!! It is the life source of your amp, ther are LOTS of variations to the topic, LEARN THEM!!. Purchase some quality "Groove Tubes" or any other topline Tube maker! Why? it sounds better!!Thats what you want! The mesa tubes work fine,just as the stock rims on your car work FINE! Put some custom wheels on it & you will turn heads and increase performance, same with the amp-better tone/sound.
Go to the site review/understand all sections of the tubes category:
Preamp/Power/Rectifier. Email tech support for questions they will answer them. I use (GT-21AX7-C Preamp)(GT-5ARU/GZ34 Rectifier)(GT-6L6S Meds(4-7) YES!! Power tubes come with 3 different Distortion/volume levels. RESEARCH THIS OUT LEARN LEARN LEARN!
IF YOUR AMP SOUNDS WEAK & SCRATCHY WITH NO CUT THROAT POWER, YOUR TUBES ARE TIRED-REPLACE THEM- SIMPLE!!! If you hit the road have backup tubes/tool/batteries/strings etc.
FOURTH- Use quality speaker cables! Quality Gutar Cables! Keep power cables & speaker/effects/guitar cables away from eachother, otherwise it will humm-hiss an all that crap! Keep your speaker/effect cables short as possible. Dont use a 20ft guitar cable from your amp to your head. Use a SPEAKER thick Guage 5ft cable instead. Get IT!
FITH- Mesa has a manual for suggested sound settings, try them out! Then tweak them to your desired sound. TAKE YOUR TIME TO DO THIS!
Once you find your sound then mark them! OH! Use the rectifier Tube setting Much better than "Hi-Power" Solid state better feel, otherwise buy a peavey "Mesa" wannabe.
All the above is from my HARD learning experience with the setup.
I hope this help you!
Reliability
:
9
I cant afford a back so I dont have one, but its a good idea to do so with any instrument (YOU NEVER NOW!)
Customer Support
:
10
I blew a diode & personally drove the amp from Oakland to Petaluma & the mesa folks fixed it Free! Thanx to the Mike Wolf at MESA. I have delt with mesa a few times in my research to better grasp the operations of the amp & the tubes used in it. Special thanks to Mike Wolf & Kevin at Mesa Boogie, SUPER freindly I could of gone & had a beer with these guys! They FULLY Backup there product & will take all the time they can to help you out!
Overall Rating
:
9
I have been playing for 14 years I started at the age of 14.
If it were stolen, Yes I would get another one & probably insure it!
There are allot of high quality amps out there, this one fits my needs well. so far it is my favorite.
Feel free to contact me for any help or tips on this amp, I have been through hell & back with my guitar setup. Its not a bad thing its educational. vavasssc@gene.com -Stephan www.bymywill.com/index.htm
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $2500 (cab also)
Submitted 07/31/2004
at 06:43pm
by Chad
Features
:
10
I bought my Dual Recto new, with the matching Recto Standard Slant 412 cab.
There are multiple settings for each of the three channels, an effects loop, master volume and solo volume which gives you an extra volume setting if you need it.
The head also has a variac switch with 2 settings and a switch that lets you determine if you would like to use the recitfier tubes or a solid state recitfier like most other amps.
Very versatile.
Sound Quality
:
10
Note to anyone getting this amp. Read the instructions. The controls are different than any amp I've used and the sounds can be drastically altered. For me, some of the best sounds were with settings I would have never considered had I not read the instructions.
Also, Remove the 2 middle power tubes and one of the Recto tubes, the amp is much more manageable as a 50 watt head. With all the tubes in, I couldn't push the tubes enough to get a good sound, with the 3 tubes removed, It was still loud as hell, but I was able to push the tubes (in my house, playing out won't be a problem) much easier without blowing my ears out.
Once I did that, I backed off the gain and behold, the holy grail of guitar sounds.
Awsome amp.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I haven't had the amp long enough to give a fair assesment.
Customer Support
:
10
I called to make sure I was taking the correct tubes out and they were great. Seemed like they actually cared.
Overall Rating
:
10
I would have liked to pay less, but to be honest, it's worth the price I paid. I've had a 5150 half stack in the past and while it's a wonderful amp, it's not in the same ball park as this one. The fact that it's hand made is amazing, and then, when you see how sturdy it is, you'll be blown away.
I also like the fact that Mesa doesn't allow any price differances.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1499
Submitted 07/31/2004
at 02:45pm
by Greg
Features
:
9
All of the features have been mentioned in previous posts. This is an extremely versatile amp but it only gets a 9 because there is no reverb. Having three fully independent channels with a total of eight different modes more than makes up for the lack of reverb however.
Sound Quality
:
10
Don't be fooled by the "Nu-Metal" stigma that is usually associated with this amp. This is a multidimensional amp that can achieve many different sounds extremely well. If you like more of the British sound, just swap out the 6L6's for a set of EL34's, flick a switch (no biasing needed) and you?re set. I prefer the sound of the stock 6L6's however because they have a thicker bottom end and a more saturated sound than the EL34's.
This is not one of those amps that you need to roll your hand across the knobs and crank everything to 10 to get a good sound out of it. In fact, not one knob on my amp is cranked because Mesa's are designed so you have to find the "sweet spot", which takes a little more time, but well worth it at the end. My theory is that if you have to set the gain to 10 on your amp, then there isn?t enough gain in your amp to begin with. That goes for any setting. Many people don't spend enough time dialing in their sound with this amp but you have to be patient. It took me several weeks to dial in my sound exactly how I wanted it after I bought the amp but it was well worth the wait because I have finally found "my sound".
I play eight different guitars through this amp and they all sound great. I usually use my USA Jackson Custom Shop Dinky Archtop with an EMG 81/85 setup, my USA Jackson SL-1, and my PRS Custom 24. This amp lends itself well to all different kinds of playing styles. I can even get a killer blues sound out of it when I'm playing my strat through it.
Since Recto's are know for being a bit on the bassy side, I use the "Traditional" Recto cabs rather than the oversized "Standard" Recto cabs to keep the bottom end a bit tighter. The Celestian Vintage 30's in the Recto cabs sound great with this amp as well.
I have played this amp live when I was in a hard rock cover band and it preformed flawlessly. I would use channel 3 in the modern mode for newer stuff (Godsmack, Disturbed, Creed, Nickleback, etc.) and use channel 2 in the vintage mode for older stuff (Motley Crue, Def Leppard, Metallica, etc.). The clean channel is warm and can achieve a crystal clear sound or a slightly overdriven sound if you choose. Overall this amp sounds great for just about any style you would want to play.
Reliability
:
10
This thing is built like a brick s*** house. I have owned this amp for over two years without a problem. It doesn?t rattle or jingle even after a couple of falls and being banged into things repeatedly when I haul it around. I would expect nothing less from a hand-built amplifier.
I recently replaced the power tubes for preventative maintenance reasons since I was playing out live but the old tubes were working just fine. In fact, I kept the old tubes as backups since they still sounded good when I took them out.
Customer Support
:
10
Everyone I have dealt with at Mesa has been great. I have called them several times with questions or to order tubes, accessories, etc. and they have been very helpful. Tim McKee is especially knowledgeable and can answer any question under the sun. Even if you want to call them just to ask about getting a certain sound or how to tweak something just right, they can help. What other amp manufacturer offers that kind of customer support?
Overall Rating
:
10
When I bought this amp over two years ago, I played about every other head with similar features and in the same price range on the market. I was not overly impressed by the Peavey 5150's and the Crate Blue Voodoo just sounds like a really loud solid state amp with no warmth whatsoever. The closest comparison I found was with the Marshall JCM 2000 TSL-100 but I thought the Marshall lacked the thickness and the crunch that the Dual Rectifier has. Plus, you get a lot more features from the Dual Rectifier than you would with a TSL-100 for about the same amount of money.
Overall I have been very pleased with this amp and wouldn't trade it for anything. I think you would be hard pressed to find a better sounding, more versatile amp than a Dual Rectifier for the money.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1050 used
Submitted 07/05/2004
at 08:22pm
by dale
Features
:
9
This is a 2002 100W three channel Solo head. This is amp is very versatile even within the narrow range of music that I play. I go for a very dry sound so the lack of reverb doesn't bother me at all. I go for a very saturated, compressed sound much like Master of Puppets Metallica and Fear Factory. The amp has more than enough power for whatever you do. I have waited a year to submit this review because that is how long it took me to find my sound. I only give it a 9 because the clean channel is not horrible but it's not perfect either.
Sound Quality
:
9
To all potential buyers!! If you can't find a store that has one in stock, go to the Line 6 website and listen to the sound clip of the POD recto setting. That is EXACTLY how this amp sounds at its best out of the box. So if you are the plug straight in with no effects kind of player and you don't like what you hear, move on, this isn't the amp for you. HOWEVER, This amp's sound can be colored in in some fairly simple ways as mentioned below.
My rig: Jackson RR3 with EMG 81s straight into a Rocktron Piranha, Piranha output to the input on the mesa. I have a Boss GE-7 EQ pedal in the effects loop with the effects send and return at about 3:00. Don't listen to the manual which tells you to keep them both at 12:00. Even without an external preamp, the EQ set up in this fashion SIGNIFICANTLY improves the sound of this amp.
If you do buy this amp (and you play metal), remove all of those worthless metal plates on the preamp tubes and throw them away. They are negative to anode plate and 'urge' the electrons back the cathode. The exact opposite of what you want! Remove all of the preamp tubes and put in some Groove Tubes ECC83Ss in the preamp section. They are only 15 bucks each and they are the entire gain stage i.e. 'Sound' of the amp. Makes a HUGE difference! I put JJ 6l6GCs in the power section but I'm picky. I tried EL34s and thought that they had more of an open ended distortion with less compression and attack.
Cabinets: I had the 4x12 Dual Rectifier cab that came with the amp. It had EVs in it and I traded it in for a new Mesa 2x12 with Celestion 30s in it. A marked improvement, so make sure you get a newer Mesa Cab or one with the Celestion 30s in it. They are less 'farty' than the EVs and provide punchy bass, tolerable highs and limited mids (which I like).
I really can't get a great clean sound but with the EMG 81s it's tough with any amp. I never use it so it doesn't bother me.
For me the only distortion settings I use are Channel 2 Vintage and Channel 3 Modern. Most folks who play metal never leave the latter but the former has a really sweet balanced distortion. This amp is extremely quiet even at high settings. When the tubes start crapping out you'll hear microphonics even when your not playing but that isn't the amps fault! I give it a 9 because out of the box it isn't perfect. But a little cash and tweaking time and you will keep this amp forever.
Reliability
:
8
Always use a backup.
I take very good care of my amps so I can't say whether it can take a beating or not but it is built very solidly. My main gripe with this amp is the pots. This amp is only two years old and 3 of the pots had dead spots. Not scratches but points of complete cut-out. I cleaned the pots and everything was fine but to me that is a bit poor for an amp of this quality.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I have never dealt with the company.
Overall Rating
:
9
I have been playing for 15 years. When I was amp shopping, I played every head in guitar center and this one was the best of all of them. I tried every Marshall including the hilarious Mode Four, Peaveys, Crates, Randalls, Line 6 (which are great if you like solid state amps). I've never played any of the boutique amps but I would buy this amp again if it were stolen.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid:
Submitted 06/16/2004
at 01:31pm
by Carlos Otero
Features
:
8
Its 2001 and almost everything about the features has been said......its pretty verstaile...only draw back i found on the features is the fact that it dosnt have a reverb and that it dosnt have a good versatile FX loop like the TSL
Sound Quality
:
3
used it tru a Ibanez rg550bk with gibson pups and a ibanez 7 string with Dimarzion pups....brutal distortion awfull sound ,it sounds sterile and dosnt have the tone....my ex-jcm900 was a way better amp in sound quality (and jcm900's are pretty hated among everybody)...i tried to make this shit sound real but no luck, also i took it to some experts and no luck.......sounds like crap ...but hey if you like nu-metal its problaby the amp u need ...dont expect it to make good tone and sound cause if you have tested a marshall this amp wont do it...tried the site , downloading configurations and the manual ...no tone there either
Reliability
:
No Opinion
didnt give me no problems exept the pop when u changed channels...but no biggie...seems built like a rock thou.....
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
didnt hve the pleasure to deal with them , but word is that they are one of the best
Overall Rating
:
1
i currently own a TSL way better amp , try one of these first trust me ....
if it was stolen i would problaby pay the guy for doing me such a great favor...
only thing good about this amp is that it looks cool
i compared it to like 6 other amps and i felt like crap when i saw that every one of them sounded better...(marshall's,Fender,Peavey,Laney)
If you have tried one and liked it hey amps are like girls , they arent made equal and there are no duplicates, so if you like it when u test it ....test it again and make sure, compare it to other amps.....make sure cause its an expensive amp and you dont wanna end up like me.......
P.S. There are hundreds of amps , and maybe what is good for me of for other people is not nesesarily good for you ,....so the best advice i can give you is try and retry before u buy ....make sure to test it with you guitar ,that way you will notice the real diference
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $185 used
Submitted 06/16/2004
at 11:40am
by Swami Rabinowicz
Email: dbamplification<at>yahoo dot com
Features
:
9
Three channels with a pretty wide range for each. Very versatile as is. We just got the head and haven't spent more than a couple hours with it. My girlfriend, Tiffany and I build and mod amps and never expected to ever be able to afford an amp like this.
We will need to get the footswitch, although I was able to figure out how to switch channels and the solo function.
Sound Quality
:
10
We ran a Les Paul Standard, a modded Fender Tele (with Duncan pickups) and a mahogony body/quilted maple bound top Tele with American series Fender pickups through it.
This amp covered any style we play. I'm more blues oriented and Tiffany leans toward 80's metal.
The amp exhibits little noise except when trying to coax clean from the red channel. The clean was not quite "Fender" but is excellent. The clean quality depends on what speakers we tried.
I was able to get my favorite distortion tones from this thing. Nailing punchy, Marshall tones was a cinch. We liked Celestion Greenbacks in a detuned cabinet (as per Kevin O'Connor of London Power) best but the amp sounded great with a Vintage 30 in a closed back ported cabinet...especially distorted. Clean, the Greenbacks were better, or the V30 combined with an open back Jensen cabinet.
We build and mod amps and aside from the coldish, typical Mesa biasing, I'm more than pleased.
Reliability
:
9
The amp appears to be very well built. The flying leads on the pots make repair easier, but I'd never gig with a tube amp of any type without a backup.
We just bought the amp, so we'll see if we run into any prolems. The tubes are still original, and I see no reason to change them...yet. I spoke with technical at Mesa this morning and I expect this thing to last. If it breaks down, we'll fix it.
Customer Support
:
8
As a repair tech, I've dealt with Mesa going back to the early 80's and have found them to be easy to get hold of, and very helpful. I like to get full schematics for all my amps and effects, but as this is a current production amp, Mesa won't release the schematics...so for that little niggle I give them an...
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing since 1967, and my girlfriend since 1984. This amp was such a ridiculously great deal, we'd be pissed if it were stolen and I'm positive, would never be able to afford a replacement.
We bought it because of the price. I saw it at our local pawnshop, in perfect shape, with the cover and they wanted $229. My girlfriend asked if they'd take two bills, and they countered with $185 plus tax. How could we pass it up?
We may choose to sell it in the future if we find it doesn't get enough use, but I assure you...we won't sell it for $185!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1499
Submitted 06/12/2004
at 12:02am
by Anonymous
Features
:
9
im sure u all know this by now
Sound Quality
:
10
i use a Gibson Les Paul Standard, i play metalcore, melodicore, emocore, etc, good shit, this amp works great for these styles and many others.
Basically, i went to the local guitar shop (LA Music anyone?) to pick up drum sticks for my drummer, and figured "what the hell, ill fool around with this mesa for a couple minuts." at the time i was playing a 5150 II stack. the minut i plugged in, the clean blew me away, for a high gain amp it is fuckin amazing! i mean, its no matchless, but if you want a matchless... buy a matchless. i love it. the gain channels have a bit more of a learning curve, but once u figure it out, its hard to beat. i had to have this amp, and have it i did. the next day i traded in my 5150, and bought this amp. the longer you have it, the more you will like it.
Reliability
:
10
although iv heard that they are fragile, i have yet to have a problem with this amp, and i tour quite a lot, so its not like its just sitting in my apartment
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
havnt had to deal with them yet... the manual was good...
Overall Rating
:
10
iv been playin for about 9 years, and if this amp where stolen, id replace it in a second. The tone is just amazing, blows my old 5150 away.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1499.00
Submitted 06/01/2004
at 08:52am
by BRUCE
Features
:
10
This is my second review of this amp. My first was after having it for 1 day. After playing through it for a week I love it even more. Amp was made in 2004. Perfect for any style of music. VERY LOUD!
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
This amp is perfect. I have read many bad reviews and I just cant fiqure out how anyone can have a problem with this thing. It can produce almost any tone you can dream of. I have been using a Laney Aor series 50 for the last 20 yrs and this head can reproduce what the Laney does and a zillion more tones to boot.The modern feature on channel 3 is killer. Every channel is wonderful.I play a Jackson SL1 and a Gibson Les Paul classic and I think maybe the problem for others is the guitar they are using and the fact they did not read the manual that comes with this unit. This head is awesome. If anything ever happens to it I would buy another in a second!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Only had it one week so I dont know, but the thing is built like a tank!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing guitar for 25 years and have always been very picky when it came to tone. This head is the king of tone. I have used Peavy, Marshall and Laney, and the Mesa blows them all away by far. You can dial in almost any sound you are looking for with this thing. Again I will say this amp is AWESOME!!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1499
Submitted 05/20/2004
at 09:51am
by Anonymous
Features
:
9
I bought the amp in 2001. It took me a while to get over the learning curve. The only bad feature is the parallel effects loop. Manageable, but not versatile.
Sound Quality
:
10
You can get any sound out of this amp if you set it up right. I play metal mostly. Judas Priest to SOAD. My formula for God tone:
2 EL34's - 50 watt setup. You have to be able to crank the master volume to get good tone. Didn't like the 6L6's.
Recto cabinet - used a Marshall cab at first, first mistake
Vintage gain settings - The Modern setting is over-the-top and too loud. I can only get the master volume to 3 using the modern gain (and not piss off my bandmates). Again, you have to crank the master volume to push the power tubes. I run the gain knob around 7-8 with the Vintage setting.
I like to use effects with my rig. I have a TC Electronic G Major. People will tell you not to use this unit with the Recto because of the parallel effects loop. They are correct. I piddled around with crappy sound for a year scratching my head thinking WTF? Then I read about serial versus parallel effects loops. I managed to fix the problem by cranking both the pre and post effects knobs to 100%. This seems to have fixed the problem and the effects sound great. Also, you can control the channel switching via MIDI using the TC, you just need a special cord.
Reliability
:
9
I had an issue with the foot controller cord (which I don't use anymore). Mesa replaced it for free. I also have something funny going on with my gain knob on the clean channel. I swapped it out, but the problem is still there. Might be a tube issue...?
Customer Support
:
10
Good so far.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing in bands for 15 years. Overall, its the best amp I have ever heard/played. Once you learn how all the controls work together, you can dial in any tone.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 05/19/2004
at 07:36am
by Anonymous
Features
:
No Opinion
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
Only played it in the store. No real world experience yet.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
10
Refering to my experience with my MkIII.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Okay, here's my situation. I am presently deciding which of two amps to purchase, a Marshall TSL 100, or a Boogie Dual Recto. It has always been my experience to match cabs with heads. I currently own a Marshall DSL 401 which I love. I also have a Rivera 55-12. I have a Fender Big Apple Strat, American Deluxe Tele QMT HH, a Jackson Fusion Pro with EMG 81/85 combo. I have owned a 5150 and a Marshall Jubilee 2550, both of which I sold to guitarists in the band I left several years ago. I have owned a Boogie MkIII not symul-sinc, Randall rg-80, Seymour Duncan Convertible 60, and my first real amp was a MKII 50 watt Marshall with a 100 watt angled, and a 75 watt straight Marshall vintage cabs back in the old days when there was no vintage just new. I have played in many fairly popular bands around the east coast going back to 1974. Why am I writing this? Well first of all if you don't own the damn thing keep your idiotic opinions to yourself. We all can go to a guitar center, try it out, and make up our mind whether it sucks or not! The guy who sat in direct line of a Recto and judged the amp by some apparently lame guitarists inability should also refrain from wasting space on this board. It just sounds like a bunch of kids saying my dad can whoop your dad! Grow Up! I know first hand that every guitar and amp I listed above has good tone built in, and can sound extremely good if you learn how to produce tone with your fingers and your picking technique. Learn how to play first before you start trashing good equipment. If the amps break down then say so, if the tone isn't as good as something else you have owned, and have experience with say that. But leave this petty name calling and trashing out so someone like myself can read the meaningful reviews after trying an amp out and make an educated decision. At this point I am leaning toward the Dual Recto. In the store it sounds incredible. But I am interested in the day in and day out functions of using the tube or solid state rectifiers, and how the sponge control sounds. I found the effects loop comments helpful. For everyone who has written an insightful review thank you!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1200 used
Submitted 05/03/2004
at 10:21am
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
If you are reading this you know the features. I'll spare you the details.
Sound Quality
:
10
I can't believe how many people are bashing this amp. You should not buy this amp if you don't want high gain distortion. The clean is very usable on channel 1, the vintage gain is great on ch 2, and ch 3 modern is what this amp was made for. I have owned 2 - Tremoverbs, and now 2- dual rectifier solos, and a bogner uberschall. I will say that the bogner definitely sounds a little more balanced but it should be for $1300 more than the mesa. You CANNOT EXPECT TO GET A GOOD SOUND BY CRANKING THE GAIN. Learn to use this amp. I play an esp viper and a prs custom 24 thru the mesa and then to a 2X12 Bogner closed back cab with vintage 30's. It will blow you away. I had the mesa 4X12 cab and got rid of it when I heard the bogner. Better sound (just as mean if not meaner) and a lot less space.
This amp takes time to dial in the sweet spot. More experienced players will find it a lot easier. READ THE MANUAL. It talks about the controls and suggested settings. This is not a marshall. You can't turn the bass up to 8 and the treble up to 9 with the gain at 10. Every little bit makes a huge difference.
Reliability
:
10
Very reliable as is all Mesa gear.
Customer Support
:
10
Had a question answered in about 30 min.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I would definitely replace this amp if anything ever happened to it. Lame ass people have been bashing this thing trying to play classic rock and john mayer crap. it's meant to be heavy if you don't like heavy don't buy it and stop whining because you played it in a store for a few minutes. Also, you need a quality cab for this head as stated in other reviews. Don't even bother with an open back cab. Overall this is truly a high quality gain yielding beast. It was never supposed to do anything else. Buy one now!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1500
Submitted 05/02/2004
at 09:08am
by Mark
Features
:
9
2003, 3 channels, Channel 1: Clean/Pushed, Channel 2: Vintage, Raw, Modern, Channel 3: Identical to 2, but has a different sound to it. 100watts all tube power. Use this amp all the time, enough power for anyone.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use a schecter C-1 Elite in this amp, it is a GREAT metal amp. I mainly play Metallica, SOAD, Shadows Fall, Foo Fighters, and a bunch of stuff....(I'm not limited in my types of music). This amp handles the sounds of those bands wonderfully. The clean channel isn't bad, but the distortion channel is much better. If you looking for a good sounding distortion, get the Boogie. Don't go with pedals, I believe true distortion comes from tubes.
Reliability
:
10
This thing will not break! It is built exeptionally well.....keep a couple spare tubes on hand though.
Customer Support
:
10
Haven't had to contact them, but heard they're a great company
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for 8 years now. I deffinitely would recomend this amp to the average head banger, but not to the general country star. So, don't be fooled by some of the reviews on this page, it might sound like shit once you first get it, but give it some time to break it in, and fool around with different settings and such.......Also, when i went to look at mine, at guitar center, some asshole whent and switched the setting from the regular tubes to solid state, and also had the ohm rating plugged into 16 with an 8 ohm cab....this just tells you to check out stuff, and set it up the way you want to.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 04/30/2004
at 04:24am
by paul greaves
Email: grebs at ntlworld<dot>com
Features
:
10
enough features for 95% of situations
Sound Quality
:
10
well got mine about six months ago played marshall all my life up to this point, offered s/hand at a good price so thought id try it as my old marshalls getting a bit tired, first week wanted to get rid of it but when i took time and trouble to get into it what an amp, you have to understand that this amp is so organic it wont hide sloppy playing like a marshall it perfectly reproduces what you play and feel, dig in, it growls, play light, it cleans up, its so responsive, you will never get a proper feel for it by trying it in a music store for 20 minutes "you play this amp" its an extension of the guitar strings and can cover most playing styles with careful use of the tone controls this is not an amp for you if you want one sound no matter how you attack the guitar but if you want to here every nuiance of your playing shine through, invest, you will grow to love it, use EL34's in mine which add's that UK sound my preferance only
Reliability
:
10
no complaints as yet built like a brick shithouse
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
im in the UK so cant comment on this not had to use them yet
Overall Rating
:
10
took a while to get used to it but now love it
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1100 used
Submitted 04/29/2004
at 03:37pm
by Shredder
Features
:
7
Read the reviews below for features. There are lot's of them though. Too bad they don't do much.
Sound Quality
:
1
I'm using several guitars. Primarily and Ernie Ball Axis, and a Gibson Les Paul Custom. I gig regularly in Central California in a cover band. Clubs, fairs, parties.......you know the routine. This amp is worthless for just about everything we do. The clean channel sounds like ass, and the distortion is dull and lifeless.
OK. I give up on this piece of shit. The amp has the lamest sound I've ever heard. Maybe I just got a bad one. I wasn't expecting much out of the clean channel. But geeez....the distortion channels are both lame. I could get a better distortion out of a $29 DOD pedal than I can out of this thing.
Reliability
:
8
Built like a tank. No problems.....hehehehe......not that I use it much anymore. When I was TRYING to use it I didn't experience any failures.
Customer Support
:
10
These guys are the best. Spent hours on the phone with them discussing saettings, tubes selection, and other factors to get this piece of shit to sound right. If the amp was half as good as their customer support I'd be one happy camper.
Overall Rating
:
3
Been playing about 20 years. Pretty much had it all at one time or another. Wanted to give Mesa a try cause I've heard so many great things about them. Don't waste your money. Thank GOD I didn't sell my other amps. I'm dumping this piece of shit on eBay as soon as I can.
I currently own a Marshall TSL 100, and a Tech 21 Trademark 300. The Trademark 300 just blows this thing out of the water.....as does the Marshall.
I checked a few Dual rectos out at Guitar Center just to see if they had the same crappy tone. They all pretty much sounded just like mine. Mesa marketing hype..........sad.
POTENTIAL BUYERS BEWARE!!! TRY BEFORE YOU BUY, OR YOU MAY REGRET YOUR PURCHASE.
Like the guy said in a review down below, if these are what the Pro's are using, they're getting them hot-rodded somewhere.
As for the rest of you guys who bought and love these things. You have been assimilated into the Mesa marketing machine. Do not resist. Resistance is futile.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1299.00
Submitted 04/22/2004
at 07:32pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
9
This is a brand new Mesa Boogie dual rectifier triple channel head. It's got one channel with the option of clean or pushed. Channel 2 has three options, raw, vintage, and modern. Channel 3 is identical to channel 2, yet has its own personality. It's also got a footswitch, parallel effects loop, manual channel changing, a bias switch if you want to use either 6L6 tubes, or EL34's for the power section. It's got 2 5U4 rectifier tubes. It also has the option to use silicon diodes or the rectifiers and another switch for a "bold" or "spongy" sound. Each channel has it's own EQ, presence, gain, and master volume pots. It also has a solo level for an increase in overall volume for a solo, and an output that controls the overall volume output for the 3 channels. I have this head through a marshall 1960A 4X12 cabinet. I use a Gibson Explorer '76 reissue, and a Standard Strat made in mexio(Mexican strat). I play everything from a John Mayer, warm clean sound, to Randy Rhodes Ozzy Osbourne era (I try to play it, I sound like crap!), to modern stuff (yes Nu metal, I know it gets old and repetitious and polished). Don't worry I still rock with old school Metallica, think 4 horsemen.
Sound Quality
:
10
My pickups are all stock (don't like messing w/pickups, think it degrades the guitar, just buy a new one). play everything from a John Mayer, warm clean sound, to Randy Rhodes Ozzy Osbourne era (I try to play it, I sound like crap!), to modern stuff (yes Nu metal, I know it gets old and repetitious and polished). Don't worry I still rock with old school Metallica, think 4 horsemen. With my strat, when the gain is set up high it can get noisy, but not any annoying sounds. The footswitch has a minor click sound that isn't audible if you turn the amp on and play. This thing is SUPER LOUD!! I try to have the volume on the lowest level for a manageable sound and it is loud and clear then. The amp itself gives very warm clean tones and great overdrive. I LOVE LOVE LOVE the clean channel. Some people might knock the clean, but if you want a really old school clean, then go drop $7,000 on some 30W old tube amp that will likely blow soon. The clean is warm, with my neck pickup on the strat it almost sounds like an acoustic guitar (the good way). I tried this amp vs. a Marshall TSL100, DSL100, and JCM800. Marshalls are notorious for Crappy clean (In my opinion and others I hear), but have that mids and highs distortion. If you really want that then buy a marshall that is only good for one thing. Or buy this dual recti and get a super versatile amp that can go from super warm to overkill distortion( think death metal). The bold vs. spongy switch is really cool. The spongy is for that classic "brown" sound, especially selected with the tubes. The spongy is for the high headroom. The distortion can go from just over the clean area to ultima area. The three different selections on channels 2 and 3 are great, very versatile. I bought a trademark 120 before this, because it had an awesome clean. Go try that one out if you want a great clean for only $750 (be prepared for some funny quirks, like a continuous buzzing when all pots are down to minimum), but the clean on the Mesa is much better. TWO WORDS OF ADVICE: TRUST RANDALL!!!!!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
This think is heavy though. Well all heads are (tube ones anyway). This thing looks road ready with real solid wood casing and metal face) no problems of any kind, but I've only had it for a month. This thing looks super easy to repair if it needs to be. My old amp was always needing to be brought to the repair shop. I brought it to the best repair place in the state (the place where the big celebrities bring their stuff, the ones that fill up the mega venues) They repair anything from Crate amps, to Vintage Fender Bassman amps and beyond. The guy there said both times, that Tech 21 trademark 120 was the hardest amp to repair because it was a beast to open.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Hmm.. no experience with this part, but seems like it would be really good with all of the information with the amp.
Overall Rating
:
10
This is a great amp definetly a ten. There is nothing else that compares. It has its own unique sound, the ideal sound. Buy it if you're even considering an amp head. Expensive, but is the best and worth its weight 1000 times over.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 04/15/2004
at 10:48am
by shaun
Features
:
No Opinion
I love this amp but recently it's been sounding worse and worse. I play a Jackson dkmg with the 81 85 emg's and I know its not the guitar or my effects cause i've tested all that so it has to be the amp. When its cranked up on ch.2 and ch.3 I get this real annoying buz/hum sound and increased feedback which isnt completely abnormal but im losing a certain amount of sustain and tone because of it. Its embarrassing especially when playing live cause im constantly on my volume pedal during pauses. So now im thinking maybe its a blown speaker, I got the mesa 4x12 with the diamond plating on the side but its practically new so a blown speaker doesnt seem likely but I'll be checking into it. Other than that I guess it could be a tube problem but they all look good, none of them appear to be blown. This is frustrating, I know this is a review page but if anyone reading this has had a similar experience with this amp let me know how to overcome this problem.
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 03/25/2004
at 03:03pm
by Ben
Features
:
No Opinion
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
I spent about five hours playing one of these. I do not own one, so im not going to rate anything. I just wanted too say that this thing had by far the worst sound I've ever heard. The only word I know that can describe it is "brittle". It feels like it going to snap in between your fingers. No matter how many eq settings i tried I just couldn't get a good sound. The bass is muddy and the high end is so mattelic you can taste it in your mouth. I played this thing with a 1960A and an SG standard too.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1200 used
Submitted 03/09/2004
at 12:56pm
by kyle murdario
Email: beyondthegates9<at>hotmail dot com
Features
:
10
Amp is a year old. It have too many features to list..but quickly..3 channels, very versatile effects loop.. the whole damn thing is soo versatile.
Sound Quality
:
10
I just bought this off ebay with hesitation because ive heard bad reviews, nto to mention ive played one in guitar center and it didnt sound so hot. but i gave it the benifit of the doubt. When i got in the mail i was blown away at how beautiful this thing sounds. I play a Ibanez RG 270 with a emg 81 in the bridge. And the cab is a old ass fender cabinet (yes it is possible to get a good sound out of a rectifier without using a rectifier or marshall cab) im not sure what speakers are in the cabinet,but everything thats played through it is golden...anyway.. i did my research on this beast and looked at suggestions and user settings from other users before i even have the amp. i knew how the whole thing operated by the time it go here. my advice to anyone in the market for one of this is to research it. If you are looking for a liquid smooth sustain with a killer punch, this amp is it. dont believe those who tell you that this amp only produces mud, because alls ive been able to get out of this amp is killer tones. 2 days of tweaking and my sound is GOLDEN. im gonna get new JJ tubes for it which will enhance the sound even more. The sounds on this amp are very versatile, and the knobs are sensative..a little bit of tweaking can completely change everything. the clean channel is surprisingly good. ive got no problem with it. sounds great when i switch to the neck pickup. The second channel is a great rock distortion. not too much gain, but enough to be punchy. its actually really fun to play on. the third channel is brutile. its got a massive sound and punch. i keep the presence at about 10:00 the master volume at 12:00. the gain at 1:30-2:00, the bass at 3:00, the mids at 11:00 and the treble at 12:00. i use the silicon diode tubes (hi power) effects loop on (which drains some power, but if you adjust the send level, you can make up for this loss. its all explained in the manual) and i have it switched to bold. WALA! the voice of god coming through the speakers
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Well ive only had it for 4 days but it seems to be solid. I never really have a back up amp and you shouldnt need one in the first place unless you plan on throwing your equipment around. if you pay $1200 for something, you damn well better take care of it . i have an older mesa boogie preamp that has been dropped a few times and has seen rough times, and it still works like a charm NEVER a problem with it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
10
yes, believe the hype, this amp is good if you looking to play rock or metal. your tone is here. with other amps, if i were to crank it and walk further away from the cabinet..the sound would get weak or sound like crap. no matter where i stand this thing shimmers. Any others who have problems with this amp either dont know what they are doing or they are playing music that isnt suited for this amp.
I own a mesa boogie studio preamp, and a peavey 5150 II. the mesa boogie preamp can almost compete, but the sound looses definition at high volumes, and the peavey 5150II cant get the volume or the tone that the dual can. I really wish i would have wised up sooner and just bought one of these. i woulda saved myself alot of trouble rather than dealing with shitty processors, pedals and solid state heads. this is the end of the line for me. im finally happy with my sound
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: 1925 (#)
Submitted 02/25/2004
at 08:58am
by Anonymous
Email: stevvyb at aol<dot>com
Features
:
10
Sound Quality
:
10
Reliability
:
8
Customer Support
:
10
Overall Rating
:
10
I just wanna post some comments that i think other Rectifier users may find helpful as i have had this amp for over a year now
my setup is as follows.
PRS Custom 24 ----> Mesa Dual Rec ----> Mesa 4x12
Boss GE7 equalizer ----> Boss DD3 Delay in fx loop
first of all, make no mistake this amp is great.
i know people will slate it but this is probably due to them playing it in a store for about 20 mins.
it takes time to get used to this amp, how it feels etc.
on the first play through it, to me it seemed like the notes were jumping out of the cabinet even before i played them, and it did not feel very smooth to play through.
after a while you will become accustomed to this and the amp will gradually start to compliment your playing.
the sounds that can be coaxed from this amp are very varied.
even though it is tempting, dont scoop the mids clean out when playing on the modern mode this will make the amp sound thin and the middle frequencies are where your guitar tone comes from,
scooping the mids will make this amp sound very chainsaw-ish
imo add more middle than usual and use treble and presence sparingly
because the latter two are very powerful controls on the rectifier..
here are the settings that i currently use
CLEAN
bass 10
mid 0.5
treble 6
presence 5
gain 6
volume 4
mode clean
channel two
bass 8
mid 6.5
treble 4
presence 3
gain 10
volume 4.5
mode vintage
channel three
bass 10
mids 6.5
treble 4
presence 3
gain 10
volume 4.5
mode modern
i do use the GE7 to spice up the clean sound a bit when i need to cut through a bit more..
the rectifier select is set to silicon diodes and i have the power set to bold to achieve maximum grit.
these settings are for the tones i currently use and they do get adjusted every now and then to cater for the acoustics of the room etc.
i can pretty much get any sound i can think of out of this amp and it sounds punishing miked up through a huge p.a.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1599
Submitted 02/19/2004
at 02:06pm
by Joel
Features
:
9
This amp has everything I need. A couple more channels would be nice for a more pushed clean sound and an extra distortion but I can't recall any 5-channel amps other than digital. It has 3 channels (switching on the pedal board) and an effects loop. The effects loop pretty much sucks. It cuts a lot of volume and some tone out so I would recommend running your effects direct with this amp. I use it at my youth group and for my band. We play a lot of emo and emocore but also classic and mellow stuff. It covers all of those genres and more. I only wish it had an extra channel or two... but only digital amps do that and digital sucks.
Sound Quality
:
10
I'm playing through a 1980 Gibson Les Paul Custom and I'm not exactly sure what the pickups are. It's my dad's so whatever came with it when he bought it. Gibsons give a little more of a deeper and muddier tone than other guitars but despite what other people have said, I've never had a problem with it being too muddy. It feedsback pretty easily at higher levels on channels 2 and 3 but it's pretty much just the pickups. I haven't had a problem with any noise at all. Channel 1 gives a great clean sound but keep the gain at about 12:00 and use the master, otherwise you'll get more of a crunch than you want. On Channel 2 I use the "Raw" setting and get a pretty good Brian May sounding distortion. Much better than the Channel 1 "Pushed". Channel 3 has the most balls of any distortion I've ever heard!! I've never been happier and there's nothing that can mimick or match it like the real thing. Don't settle for less. Lately, I've been using the "Vintage" setting and I keep the bass at about 1:00 b/c the Vintage has a lot more body than the "Modern" setting. Vintage is also much better for lead play - it sustains much better compared the but Modern. But if you're into hardcore, the Modern setting is perfect and I wish there was a 4th channel that I could use for that setting. You have to crank the bass though because it's pretty tinny. I seriously have never been so incredibly pleased with a distortion sound... it's amazing and you can't beat it with anything.
Reliability
:
10
I can't afford a back up right now but I've never had a single problem with it. Plus, Mesa Boogie makes it... IN the US. I trust it 100%.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I'm 15 years old and have been playing for about 4-5 years now. I bought a Line 6 Flextone III XL 212 before this but returned it. My dad owns a Mesa Boogie Road King and after playing the real thing, I couldn't settle for less. I love everything about this amp except for the effects loop but the tone is incredible and unbeatable. It way outdoes a Line 6's digital "RectoDual" model
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1499
Submitted 02/19/2004
at 04:43am
by matt
Email: Grithole<at>yahoo dot com
Features
:
9
it does what it should
Sound Quality
:
5
I bought one off ebay about a year ago and it sounded PHENOMINAL! i mean tons of chunk... distortion was bad assed. everything. And so the story goes, i end up blowing it out by plugging in the wrong two tubes to make it 50 watt. after i get it fixed and get it back, it sounds like complete crap to me. im totally frustrated and even tho the guy assures me that nothing is wrong, it doesnt sound good. it has no sustain and i have to turn the raw channel 3 up to full gain to get any chunk. i used to have to put it at about 6 o clock to get tons of gain. frustrated as i am, i sell it on ebay and look for a new one. i stop at the local guitar store and hear one that sounds great. like its supposed to. the only problem is that he sold it 15 minutes before i get there and i have to watch the guy buy it in front of me. so, determined to get my killer tone, i go to guitar center and order one. when it gets here, it sounds just like my "broken" one! im like WHAT THE HELL?! so, that day i end up going to philly... 5 hour drive. this guitar center has 4 in stock. they all SOUND THE SAME! what the hell is going on here? my recto sounds terrible and every one i've played other than the one at the first guitar store sound the same. p.s. I was told that it may be that the guitar has to be broken in because the one at the first guitar store was 6 months old but the others were newer. please help me out. you can send responses to my email. MY OLD ONE SOUNDED GREAT, WHAT GIVES?
grithole@yahoo.com
Reliability
:
7
it works
Customer Support
:
7
fine
Overall Rating
:
8
my first one was great... all others blew except the one i heard in triple r guitar. what the hell?!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1420
Submitted 02/18/2004
at 02:25pm
by By my will
Email: vavasssc at gene<dot>com
Features
:
No Opinion
2001, paid $1420,00
Sound Quality
:
10
I use a Schecter C1+ /Gibson w/EMG 85 @ Bridge.
Perfect for most Hardcore type Music.
Dont bother with the amp if your into playing the "Beatles" "Willie Nelson" "John Mayher",(No Offence to these bands, just the wrong amp for it)Dont bother with it unless your in a band that plans on hittin the road, its a waist to try to play this in you bedroom. The recto is Obnoxious in sound. The louder the better.
If you get one, read the handbook, it will answer alot of your confusion. I read It, played with all settings, Got that "recto" sound I wanted & start riots @ shows.
Get a decent cab Peavey Cab or Marshall (4x12)any less you should have purchased a combo.
If your using stock "Duncan Design Pickups" invest in purchasing Seymour Duncan/EMG/ Unless you play a PRS or Gibson they're good to go.(should be! for the price of those things)
ENJOY!!
Thing Sounds like a DAMN CHAINSAW , (I like that!)
Reliability
:
10
Buy a Forklift (J/K)
No problem with it.
Have extra tubes.....Just incase
Customer Support
:
10
Havent had to ......Hopefully never!
Overall Rating
:
10
Played for 12 years.
If stolen I would quit the band & take up a new gig.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1600
Submitted 02/17/2004
at 04:13pm
by Brett
Email: bvonscott at hotmail<dot>com
Features
:
9
Has all the features i would ever need. Well except i wish it had a headphone jack so i could play while my roomate sleeps.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use a Ibanez RG with the stock pickups into a hush pedal, then a BBE 462 sonic maximizer, the the amp. My cabinet is a peavey with 3 celestion G12K-85's and a G12-80 Classic Lead. My playing style is Nu-Metal kinda like a perfect cicle.
Channel one does the job for me, sounds good when not "pushed".
Channel two is great for ACDC-ish stuff, but i never really use it.
Channel Three will blow you away. Way over the top distortion with great bass and treble. But it does take time to figure out how to get a good sounding distortion. I HAVE A SUGGESTION to anyone looking to buy this amp or didnt like this amp: If you use the wrong combination of guitar amd cabinet with it you may not like this amp, especially after spending $1600. Everone who thinks it sounds muddy is because of the other equipment used with it. You must use a 4 speaker cab with at least 2- Vintage 30 celestions in it to get the right tone on heavy distortion. Im replacing two of mine for those soon. The G12T's or K's are too muddy sounding for this amp. So ill have 2- V 30's, 1 Classic lead, and 1 G12K-85.
Also there is alot of hiss at high volumes so get a hush pedal so you dont hear crap when paused. Other than that the sound is BRUTAL!
Reliability
:
10
Funny things is Mesa wont let dealers dicount for used or floor models so I bought a floor model at a guitar center here in bakersfield, CA. When I took it home it was blown!! So i traded it in for a new one they "mysteriously" couldnt find the day before and it has worked flawlessly since.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Havent needed any yet.
Overall Rating
:
9
I absolutely love this amp. I know its not a Diezel which everyone thinks is the best but I could never afford a $4000 amp. If you have the right guitar and the right speakers in your cab this is the BEST amp for the money and the range of sounds and styles its good for. Its not perfect for everyone but for me it is!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1400
Submitted 02/10/2004
at 02:02pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
9
Purchased new in 2002. Has tons of features, some work as advertised, some don't. My biggest bitch is the channel switching, which creates a loud pop. Also, the effects loop SUCKS ASS, don't even bother trying to use it, it will knock about 6db off you volume, and trash your tone.
Sound Quality
:
9
Use several guitars live, 78 LP custom with Duncan JB, Jackson Soloist with Duncan JB and Hotrails, and 72 Strat with Duncan Screamon Demons. All the tones you will ever need for live rock are here, but it takes time and a small measure of intelligence to find them. After reading the reviews that say this amp sucks, I've come to this conclusion. If you think this amp sucks, buy a Squire Strat, a Line 6 POD or Crate and 10 pedals to get the sound you like. This amp is way beyond your ability to appreciate. It doesn't take a great player with great gear to make this amp sound great, but any retard who would put 10 pedals in front of this, or run it through any other speaker than the Recto Standard (which was designed to handle the low end this amp puts out on ch. 3) will not get a good sound. If your a serious player, with a good guitar, it only takes some tweaking to find what your looking for. To all who don't like this amp, quit pissing and moaning and get a Crate.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I've been gigging with it for almost 2 years now, no problems. Keep extra tubes with you at all times though!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them
Overall Rating
:
9
Awesome amp (if you have a brain and a good ear)
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1400
Submitted 02/10/2004
at 07:21am
by Chris
Features
:
10
3 channels, rectifier/silicon switch, bold/sponge, clean/pushed switch on the clean channel, modern/vintage raw on channels 2&3,
Sound Quality
:
8
I played in a metal band im know in a hard rock band, this amp does both great, i use a fender 57 reissue strat, big apple strat, and subsonic baritone, all sound good through the amp. The recto needs to be turned up to really show u how great of an amp it is. the tone controls take some getting used to, its not plug and play amp but there are some amazing tones once u get use to the controls. More than enough gain for any type of music, I found that if u turn the gain up past 3:00, it gets to mushy, buzzy and notes get lost, i usually only have it at 1:00 to 2:00. The amp is pretty bassy to so i tend to keep the bass pretty low. I see people that complain about the sound but thean have the gain cranked, they just didnt take the time to learn how to use the amp.
Reliability
:
9
i've had mine for about about 4 months with no problems, i use it regularly, practice 3 times a week occasional gigs, transporting it and practice at home. Ive never had any problems with it. As with any tube amp u need to keep spare tubes and fuse, but they are a lot easier to fix than a solid state amp if one of those goes down. One of the other guitar players in my band as one and the power on light has a short in it, but everything else on his works fine.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
haven't used, heard good things. Hopefully will never have to.
Overall Rating
:
9
It agreat amp once u learn how to use it
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1600
Submitted 01/20/2004
at 12:09pm
by tyler
Features
:
9
Bought the Dual Recto brand new for 1600 dollars,I've had it head for about 6 months bought in summer of 2002.Three channels in it of course, the switch pedal is very durable for the abuse I put it through at my band's shows. Theres no reverb on the recto making it not have as much depth that I'm used to it sounds awesome so it's not a problem. other then that it's pretty badass...it's the first tube amp I've ever owner.
Sound Quality
:
8
The type of music I play is acros between very aggresive Hardcore like norma jean and emocorish like Thrice and the bled. I use a Gibson SG factory pickups the bridge humbucker's tone and volume at 10 and the neck humbucker's tone and volume at 5, this gives it a thick sounding tone but not too thick were you can't tell what the hell's being played. I mostly use this amp in a very small practice space which makes the Recto kinda sound shitty because it'll shake the hell out of the walls cause everyone knows to get the full effect of the Dual recto you have to blast that Mofo!! I've had to spend alot of time trying to get the perfect settings for this damn thing, you will for sure not have it masterd the first time playing it. the clean channel sounds best when not flipped on pushed because when you flip to pushed distortion it's adding making the tone suffer. The distortion sounds sweeet playing through the recto cab, channel 3 has the most "brutal" distortion channel 2 sounds most for classic rock kind of stuff. but channel 3 in modern is the best
Reliability
:
6
I've really only had one problem with this head which was fuses blowing out and tubes going bad VERY quickly! First time was when I was in the middel of practicing with my band and the send time was in the middel of a show which made me feel like a total moron...I should of had spare tubes on had but like I said this is my first tube amp. Best advice to someone buying a tube amp for the first time is to always have spare fuses and tubes on hand at every gig! Other then that I haven't had a problem with it.
Customer Support
:
9
I haven't had to deal with the company directly but when the tubes wen't out when taking the head back to the store where buying the employees were very understanding and replaced all the tubes free of charge. the tubes are under warranty for six months I think and the head it self is a year. All repairs so far have been under warranty thank god!
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for about 6 years now and this is by far the best amp I've owned up to date! Pretty pricy for a cheap ass like myself but the recto is worth every dime, at shows other bands come up to me saying how awesome the sound is. If this thing was stolen I would probably first track down the biotch that stole it and kill em but if I couldn't do that I'd most likly buy it again but probably used. My friend bought the Dual recto before I ever thought about buying and when I heard how awesome the sound he was getting from it I knew I had to have one plus Mesa/Boogie has a reputation of having awesome amps!
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1500.00
Submitted 01/16/2004
at 12:47pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
8
I bought a new 3 channel Dual Rectifier in early 2003. The amp was shipped to the store and I delivered to me still in the box.
The amp has everything I need, 3 independent channels with individual EQ, gain, presence, and volume, an awesome effects loop, the solo boost is cool and a master volume.
I?m a little disappointed with the volume in the clean channel, too big of a difference from ch2 and ch3. You don?t have much room with the volume control at high gain settings in ch2 & 3. If you take those volume past 10- 11 o?clock there is a huge drop in volume when switching to ch1.
At 1st I was disappointed that it didn?t have reverb but once I got a feel for dialing in the tone I wanted I felt like reverb would only get in the way and cause the tone to get a little muddy. The amp has plenty of body without reverb. Also the effects loop would all me to add reverb if I felt I needed it.
The different options on each channel make the amp very versatile. I?ve been able to find a professional tone for virtually every style I would ever want to play. This is great for recording but in a live setting it is not practical, you have to pick a setting for each channel and stick with it. This works for the way I use it so it isn?t a problem for me but if you expect to make drastic setting changes between songs during a live set this amp won?t work for you.
The amp is very complex, and has just about everything you could ever need. I?ll give it an eight.
Sound Quality
:
10
Tone is a very subjective thing, so I expect to see both positive and negative reviews. However, as a musician, although you are on a quest to find the perfect tone that fits your personality you must be able to recognize quality tone even if it is not the tone that you are looking for. You may give this amp a negative review but there is no way this amp could ever be rated a 1 for sound. If it is, all you can gain from the review is that the reviewer is a hack, not a musician!!!!!
Enough of that.
I have two primary guitars, Gibson Les Paul standard and a Jackson DXMG. I?ve played several other guitars through the amp some hollow bodies, and such. I don?t really care for single coils through this amp, at least without reconfiguring the settings but any guitar I?ve used with humbuckers sounds awesome.
If you are reading these reviews and thinking about buying, take to heart the fact that people say it takes time to find your tone. You will not find the perfect tone in a day, even a week, this is a very complex amp and you really need to get to know it. I actually reset the amp every two months or so. I?ll set all the settings back to zero and start over like it is a brand new amp. Each time I?m a little more comfortable with how to control the tone and how each control interacts with the others. The better I get, the better tone I can dial in. Every time I?ve done this, when I finish I feel like I?ve found the best tone I could possible find. And every time I?m wrong, because the next time it gets a little better.
I recently, replace the power tubes with EL34s, I do prefer the tone with these tubes. I loved the way 6L6 sounded but the EL34s are just a bit more me.
The real point is this amp has the tone you want. It may take some time to find but it is there. And that is the way it should be right???? I want an amp that is very versatile, that allows me to express my self perfectly. And I also want to be original, a huge piece of that of course is between my ax and me but the amp has to help. If it was easy to find the settings everyone would sound exactly the same and we don?t want that do we???
If you want great tone, this is the amp, but beware, it will take time and devotion to find exactly what you want. If you are not willing to spend the time do not buy this amp, you will never be happy!!!!!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I Haven't had any problems yet!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't had to use support but I've heard very good things
Overall Rating
:
10
I don?t think I could possible be happier with this amp. Its not perfect but show me that amp, if it existed, everyone would own it. It took some work but it should, it has all the tools you need to find your dream tone. Something unique to you, tone that says exactly what you want it to say, tone that people want to hear.
My philosophy is very simple, very few effects ( wah, delay, and noise gate), a good guitar and good amp. Set every channel so it rocks. No matter what song you play, it will rock. I don?t try to sound like the original artist; my originals aren?t designed around someone else?s tone.
The Mesa Dual Rectifier Rocks, it is that simple.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1500.00
Submitted 01/11/2004
at 06:16am
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
Mesa triple channel 2001, has a ton of different sounds,3 channels each with its own mode can switch tubes without biasing.very loud. has almost too many features.
Sound Quality
:
4
I play in a modern metal band and use a lp standard with seymour duncan pearly gates pickups and I also dabble in the blues sometimes, this amp covers the texas style very well, but for sick brutal distortion it lacks in that department.This amp has a great look but the distortion is way fucking overrated I tried every setting even a sonic max the sound was still lame . The clean channel is the worst. . I once heard that each amp sounds different,could be. I could never get that heavy mid scooped sound out of it owned it for two years tried 3 different sets of tubes same old shit sound ,I think some people are in denile over the fact that they paid $1500.00 for a amp that sounds good but is completly overrated, I say to each their own. I just played a peavey triple xxx at the store and it killed the mesa hands down for half the price,the sales guy said I was the 10th person who told him that in the past two months. The peavey is not built as well as the mesa , but in the past I had a 5150 and it had the most sickest distortion I have ever heard and it never broke down, even spilled a beer through the top once and still kept working, If you are thinking of droping a lot of cash on this amp don't be fooled because every body has one . This will be my last mesa.
Reliability
:
10
very dependable gigged many times without a backup, never broke,This amp is the best built amp I have ever seen , it just sounds like shit.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never had to.
Overall Rating
:
5
The sound if way overrated. The way the amp is built is the best ever hands down, Just sold it for $1000.00 and got the peavy triple xxx, what a difference.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1,499.00
Submitted 01/06/2004
at 08:48pm
by MRM
Features
:
9
I bought this amp new, it's a 2003 model. I used to play in hardcore bands, like most older hardcore kids, I play in an indie rock band now. The Recto covers both very well. With 3 channels I basically have my sounds set and switch between the 3. It would be nice to have reverb, but Ive found that an Electro Harmonix Holy Grail works A-Ok in the effects loop. The EQ is voiced diffrently than any other amp I used. The manual it comes with explains, in detail, how the EQ sections work. This helps a lot. I was never able to get a good sound in the music stores, I had to take it home and tweak it for a good amount of time. It has plenty of power, which is why I chose this over the Triple Recto. The Triple wasnt really necassary for my rig.
Sound Quality
:
9
At the time, I am playing a Gibson Les Paul Custom with Classic 57's, run through a Crybaby, a Boss DD-5, and a Uni Vibe. It fits my "musical style" just fine. I only prefer to play it when its cranked, so I just keep it in the practice space. I have recorded one demo with it, and it cuts through the mix fairly well. The clean channel is decent, I am sure that with a little more "fiddling", I'll be more happy with it. I keep both OD channels on the "vintage" setting at all times. The raw is a nice, moderately overdriven sound. The I dont not use the Modern setting at all, not my thing. This gain is mind blowing or anything, I think it's enough to fulfill any realistic sound your looking for. Too much gain always sounded like a bad time to me.
Reliability
:
7
I have it in a road case, and I baby it. I have no doubts that it will remain reliable. I hae owned a few other mesa products in the past, and was always able to count on them. Ive had it for a few months and nothing has gone wrong. My only concern is the power cable. It is very loose. It falls out if I bump it. I may have it hard wired, if possable. It looses points for that.
Customer Support
:
6
The warranty sounds nicein writing. I guess its void if you use diffrent tubes. So its useless to me. The stock tubes get the job done, but I have always used JJ's. So thats that. I had to contact mesa before, on my Tri Axis, and they do not answer questions through email, which does not make sense to me. I work odd hours and am not available when their phone lines are open.....so, I have never gotten through.....
Overall Rating
:
9
I have been playing for about 10 years. I started out with a Randall half stack, moved on to some mesa rack gear (studio pre amp, tri axis/2:90), then picked this up. I give this head high ratings because it does everything I need it to. I see a lot of Marshall guys get on this amp, and vice versa. The old Marshalls are amazing sounding rock amps....but in my opinion, the re-issues are poor in quality, and lack the sounds the originals produced. The Mode 4 seems to be a big hyped up gimmick. The quality is so poor it feels like a toy, and sounds much like a Crate, with less gain. Therefore, I chose this....seemed like the best option, and it hasnt let me down. I aquired this after I sold my Triaxis/2:90 set up. This was a bit more versatile, unique set up, which I will miss. If you can afford it, its deffinatly worth checking out. The recto was a nice second choice, and works for my "downsized" current rig. If this amp came up missing one day, I would not be able to afford another amp, its pricey....as are most other amps on the market.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: 1925 (#)
Submitted 12/29/2003
at 09:26am
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
2002 three channel dual rec.
does everything
Sound Quality
:
10
using this with my newly purchased PRS custom 24
upon reading Marshall reviews on this site, (i own a TSL100 also) i have noticed that all of the Marshall users really slate the Boogie players. One person even said why pay X amount of $ for a boogie when you can have a MODE4.. MODE4 i ask you.. a solid state, inferior, boogie wannabe amp.
the reason why people are prepared to pay lots for a boogie, especially here in England is because they kick the white smoke out of Marshalls especially that Bloody Mode4 piece of shite.
also to anyone that ows this amp and cant get a good sound out of it then you are tossers... i bet you scoop the mids right out and make up for the lack of definition with Presence or Treble.. A big no no on any amp. Why doesnt anyone realise a guitar sound is supposed to have middle for it to be heard..
Seen metallica recently??? i have and the live guitars have loads of middle on them so they cut through the mix and they still sound fuckin heavy as fuck
this amp does not sound buzzy, thin, fizzy, trebly or harsh. and also i managed to nail Daron Malakians sound (when he was using boogies, before he turned into a tosser and started using the Mode4) i used a lot more middle than usual, about 3 o clock, bass on full and treble about half and presence on around 9 o clock, channel 3 modern with my PRS and you Bloody Bastard it was the most hard assed, teeth grindin, bone splittin, most aggressive sound i think i have ever heard, and i dont care what you say you cannot do that with a marshall.
the most killer sounding amp i have ever had the pleasure of using.
the tsl should not even be mentioned in the same paragraph as the boogie.
totally versatile as well.. awesome raw and vintage sounds and the clean channel is good enough too.
Reliability
:
10
blew a tube but it is a tube amp that i push to the max and thats all that has happened
Customer Support
:
10
n/a
Overall Rating
:
10
The best music related product i have ever bought
i am probably never going to need another amp again, i may trade in the old marshall though and get a boogie combo to do smaller gigs.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1400
Submitted 12/25/2003
at 11:50pm
by Rikki Slater
Features
:
8
Made in 2003. Three channels. Has Diode/Rectifier switch in back. Each channel has multiple "channels" making the head very versitile. Seperate EQ knobs for each channel, although they don't seem to do a whole lot. No reverb. Great effects loop.
Sound Quality
:
3
Bought this amp brand new about 4 months ago. I have an assotment of guitars, but my main axe is a Gibson Custom Shop LP. Sorry, but this amp sounds pretty horrible to my ear. To this amps credit, I will say that the other guitar player in my band heard this amp and simply fell in love with it. I do not love this amp. The clean sound sucks. The distortion sounds like crap. Maybe it's the stock tubes. I don't know, but even with the gain up and the volume cranked the bottom end sounds sloppy and the amp has overtones that sound harmonically incorrect. I guess you gotta be into a certain sound to love this amp. I don't know why so many guys play and love these things. If you love this amp, then great for you....but I see no need to cast insults on this board to others that say they don't like it. Guys who are considering buying this amp need to hear EVERYONE'S opinion. I've been around a while and gigged L.A. through the 80's and 90's. Did the heavy metal hair band and grunge thing. I would like to think I know a little bit about tone. Simply put, this amp ain't got it.
Reliability
:
8
4 months, and so far so good. Looks like it could survive a nuclear hit. I'm pretty careful with my stuff, and carry spare tubes in my gig bag just in case.
Customer Support
:
8
Talked to them twice on the phone. They seem freindly and eager to help.
Overall Rating
:
4
Been playing about 25 years. I own several tube amps including a Marshall TSL 100 and VHT Pitbull. I also own a Peavey XXL solid state head and a Roland JC-120. Some guys love the Rectifier sound. It's just not my cup of tea. Mesa has put out the biggest marketing hype ever. Try before you buy one of these, or you'll likely be disappointed. Like the guy said a few reviews down, let your ear be the judge. I will likely sell mine soon.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: $2400 (CDN)
Submitted 12/21/2003
at 11:56pm
by B-rad
Email: somehowbrad<at>hotmail dot com
Features
:
10
Check out Mesa Booogies website for features.
Sound Quality
:
10
Alright lots of people have said it but lets make it clear. If you can't make this amp sound at least decent, you are an idiot. Do you honestly think Mesa has been fooling people for the last 12 or so years this amp has been in production into thinking it sounds good? Its popular and a huge selling amp because good guitarists can make it come alive. Learn how to use it. The amp is the only route to go for over the top modern metal sounds. No it can't do Beatles or Cream or Zep. If you wanted to play that style why in the hell did you buy this amp and not some vintage reissue Marshall or Vox. It has classic tones to it but seriousely if you bought it you bought it to rock. Read the damn owners manual. Tons of Low end. Great high end. Its one of the only amps available that you actually turn the treble up higher then the bass. Its a great amp learn to use it.
Reliability
:
10
The best. Hands down. Get real if you don't agree. Ever owned a marshall?
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
10
Great head use it for what you bought it for. And please if your gonna review this head please own own it. Unlike the idiot a few posts below who reviews an amp he hears at a gig. Get a life buddy. You have no isea the skill level or competence the guy using it has. And please refrain from comparing this head to any Line 6 or Pod or other crap and get a life. You learned how to use your VCR, now learn how to use your amp.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $1200 used
Submitted 12/14/2003
at 10:45am
by Iceman
Features
:
7
A lot of features. See reviews below for details.
Sound Quality
:
1
My tech 21 TRI-OD pedal running direct to the PA sounds better than this piece of shit. Even after new tubes, this thing sounds like crap. Not enough gain, no balls, no bottom end....and no clean channel to speak of. If this is what the pros are using....then they are getting them hot-rodded somewhere. Too wimpy for Nu-Metal/Heavy Metal......and not clean enough for other styles. The sound is in no-mans land. Just muddy crap! Playing through an Ernie Ball Music Man Axis and a Marshall bottom end with Celestions. When I first played it at Guitar Center I was looking for a replacement for my Mark III. After plugging and noodling for a few mionutes I thought "Is that it??". The sales guy set me up in an isolation room so I could play it louder. Definately sounded better louder. I thought I could tweek it to get my sound out of it after purchasing it. WRONG!!! EQ knobs hardly do anything. Your only going to get one sound out of this.....and it sounds like a a big steaming pile of crap. Don't waste your money. My Mark III wasn't really any better either (shoulda learned after the first mistake). This is my LAST BOOGIE.
Reliability
:
9
Seems very well made and dependable. I've had it for about 9 months with no problems.
Customer Support
:
8
These guys are the best! Made several calls to them to see what could be done to make this amp sound better. VERY helpful concerning tube selection, settings, etc.
Overall Rating
:
3
Been playing about 20 years. All styles. I'm a guitarist In one of the area's "hot" bands, and gig almost every weekend. If it were lost or stolen I'd happily report it to my insurance company, and feel sad for the slob that found/stole it. DON"T waste your money on this amp. The other guitar play in my band picked up a Tech 21 Trademark 300 head (3 channel) last month. Now THAT's a feature rich, GREAT sounding head. Don't be a fool like I was, and fool yourself into thinking you can fine tune the dual recto with an EQ to get "your sound". If it sounds like shit at the store....then that's because it sounds like shit.....not because you need to spend time tweaking it. A good sounding amp will sound good at just about any EQ/gain/volume setting. I've played tube amps and solid state amps for years. Don't let the tube snobs sway your buying decision. Get something that sounds good to your ear. If it's a tube amp...great. If it's a reputable solid state amp.....great. After all, it's your hard earned bucks, and it's you that has to live with the sound every time you plug in.
Product: Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo Head Triple Channel
Price Paid: US $2100 used with a new mesa standard cab. used
Submitted 12/13/2003
at 10:24am
by dave
Features
:
10
More then youll probably ever need. Plus its a tube amp, so you can change the tubes and get a totally different sound. I love it.
Sound Quality
:
10
Read overall rating.
Reliability
:
10
Its a mesa, therefore it will last forever. Tubes dont on the other hand. So if the amp is starting to sound like ass, then get some new tubes. Other then that this thing is near imortal.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I dont know, i nvr had to deal with them.
Overall Rating
:
10
Look, its really pissin me off that ppl r saying that these things hav no tone, and they hav no bottom end. And some of the ppl hav only tried them out in stores. First of all, the factory mesa tubes arent really all that good, and if ur trying out a head thats on the showroom at a store, odds r the tubes r shit from being played so much. You also need a good cab and a good guitar to use this amp. These amps r SOOOOOO sensative. Its really easy to get a pretty shitty sound out of this amp. But u really need sum good equipment if ur gonna use this amp. Plus, as soo as u get the amp (which i highly reccommend) go get some kik ass tubes that really fit ur style. The ppl at mesa tried to put neutral stock tubes in the amp to try and get the amp to at least dabble in every style of music. So dont complain about the amp untill u get some decent tubes for it. It is a tube amp, so what kinda of tubes u put in really do matter. So once you get new tubes, a good cab (i personally am obsessed with the mesa standard) a good guitar and all that shit and u STILL dont like the amp, then ur just a dumb ass who cant tweak and amp for shit and/or u just hav no clu what kind of sound u want. And if ur one of the assholes who say "o, this amp doesnt sound like a marshall, i dont like it", then go by a marshall. I'm not saying marshall is a bad amp, its actually a good amp. But the mesa just kiks its ass. Anyway, go try one out but do what i said to do. But remeber that this amps engineering is near perfect. And therefore it is EXTREMELY sensative. I also just bought a boss eq pedal to dial in my sound perfectly. This amp is now just the ultimate kik ass bitch. I love it alot, and if u do what i suggested, im sure u will too. Rock on.
|
Page:
1 2
(Show 10 | 25 | 50 | 100 reviews per page)
|
Showing 1 -
100
of 200 reviews
|
|