You're crazy lmao. The transients on picking are just like on Marshall plexis, unique for Rectifiers. It'd a character they have. The gain structure being this searing melting wall of saturation, not chunky and congested like an Orange or papery & fuzzy like an old Vox or Marshall, the Mesa Rectifier has a unique voice just like these others have unique voices that shine in different contexts. The low mid freqs of rectifiers is full and punchy, tightest amps on earth alongside Peaveys and can reach insanely aggressive peaks once cranked and saturated just like a 5150 or 6505 but it takes EQ work and taming harshness. All amps need that to sound their best.
@@ivecaughtfire7431thanks for the comments. It’s a high gain amp that’s played through a loadbox, so obviously it’s not going to sound as full and punchy as through a real cab and mics. But it’s a pretty good representation of how a Dual Rectifier should sound like. It’s got that character which you either love or hate :)
A rectifier is really a pretty good candidate for a line out box and running a standard cab as a load. Why? They sound tightest with master volume not too cranked like 9-10 o'clock, just run it where it sound good to you in room and the line out you send to an IR will sound punchy and full thanks to the speakers natural reactive load.
Wow 😮
That's the classic Rectifier sound from 90s rock and 00s metalcore, love it 🙌🏾
This sounds better then the silly corporate money grab reissue ! 100 !
Thanks! I’d like to compare them anyways 😊
I'd bet that sounds pretty good also.
@@Squidz66it does. It sounds better than a rev G. It rivals an original rev f.
Can you send the link of the cabinet pack? I can't seem to find it in ownhammer's website
www.ownhammer.com/store/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=482
What are the power tubes inside this one? 6L6 or EL34?
@@YourBestNeighbor7 ehx 6L6
is this the earlier Rev G ?
@@chuajsjs2853 It’s 009736 serial number so I think it’s probably late 90s? Dunno but I think the early G’s started after around 003200
Exactly how rev G supposed to sound
just noise.
You're crazy lmao. The transients on picking are just like on Marshall plexis, unique for Rectifiers. It'd a character they have. The gain structure being this searing melting wall of saturation, not chunky and congested like an Orange or papery & fuzzy like an old Vox or Marshall, the Mesa Rectifier has a unique voice just like these others have unique voices that shine in different contexts. The low mid freqs of rectifiers is full and punchy, tightest amps on earth alongside Peaveys and can reach insanely aggressive peaks once cranked and saturated just like a 5150 or 6505 but it takes EQ work and taming harshness. All amps need that to sound their best.
@@ivecaughtfire7431thanks for the comments. It’s a high gain amp that’s played through a loadbox, so obviously it’s not going to sound as full and punchy as through a real cab and mics. But it’s a pretty good representation of how a Dual Rectifier should sound like. It’s got that character which you either love or hate :)
Ok Bud lol
Yeah. Inside of your head.
A rectifier is really a pretty good candidate for a line out box and running a standard cab as a load. Why? They sound tightest with master volume not too cranked like 9-10 o'clock, just run it where it sound good to you in room and the line out you send to an IR will sound punchy and full thanks to the speakers natural reactive load.