hey guys -- been away bit-- had a few hours to dick about so -- here I am dicking in your about ---- Ill be gone again soon so dont take any of it to to personally![]()
exactly why they make different kinds. Sadly however some people cant grasp that, and think EVERYONE needs a wall of marshall 100 watt tube heads cranked with 35 foot pedals ....or you sound like crapDifferent uses too
in a word -- yes-- got a promotion -- running the entire company-- took over for the owner (and still doing my 2 jobs till I can hire MY replacement) so essentially doing the work of 4 people 14 hour days are the norm -- 5 days a week, on the weekends I get a break only 6-8 hours of workSo, what‘s the story? Work kicking your butt?
In this amp you may need to remove 2-3 parts:Interesting!!!!!

...to UN-solder 1 IC chip....because there is no IC sockets.
See how the covers are removable?
Making access to BOTH sides of the board easily and quickly?
This is how ampeg USA (magnavox) designed amplifiers:
for easy quick cost efficient servicing.
View attachment 76673
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Cover removed for servicing:
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Wow, sounds rough!in a word -- yes-- got a promotion -- running the entire company-- took over for the owner (and still doing my 2 jobs till I can hire MY replacement) so essentially doing the work of 4 people 14 hour days are the norm -- 5 days a week, on the weekends I get a break only 6-8 hours of work
in a word -- yes-- got a promotion -- running the entire company-- took over for the owner (and still doing my 2 jobs till I can hire MY replacement) so essentially doing the work of 4 people 14 hour days are the norm -- 5 days a week, on the weekends I get a break only 6-8 hours of work
In this amp you may need to remove 2-3 parts:
just to reach a 4th part that you are trying to replace, because that part is blocked from being accessed.
Now picture if you will removing the circuit board....to UN-solder 1 IC chip....because there is no IC sockets.
The entire board must be removed, and the re-installed, to change 1 part.
There is no access from the opposite side of the board, until the board is removed.
Although there "could have" been a removable chassis cover; the need for such access to the solder side of the board was ignored.
It's as if:
the person who designed it believed - that it would never break, or never require servicing and parts replacement.
Of course it will break, and of course the board will need to be removed.
And to do this it will take hours of time.
Hey guys, what do you make of this guy's description of his Triple Rect head he is selling locally to me?
2003 Mesa Triple Rectifier 150 Watt 3 Channel head with foot pedal. Single owner and kept in a smoke free home with no noticeable blemishes. It is missing the back tube cover bar but they are inexpensive on Mesas site. Not sure you could find a louder modern high gain amplifier. The amp is biased and has new 12AX7 tubes. It needs 3 new Rectifier tubes so i priced it as such. Although most people use silicone diode setting with this amp which renders the rectifier tubes obsolete.
Venture a guess at how much he is asking vs what you guys think it is worth. That part about the Rect tubes needing to be replaced troubles me.
When you are paying $$$ to have your amp fixed by a professional technician....That looks like a great feature!!!!!
The worst nightmare I would have unless I was a Mesa Owner and Had 67 plexi, Amp Mad and Ivan H on Speeddial and they had access to my credit card like a hospital would have me hooked up to a blood transfusion machine.When you are paying $$$ to have your amp fixed by a professional technician....
Would you want to work on that PC board yourself?
I don't think so.
Besides only the service center is going to have schematics and updates.
Access to both sides of the board saves days of time considering the lifespan of the amplifier / how many times will it be serviced.
I have worked on many Mesa amps; it's wildly time consuming.
He is asking $1200. G. But like you say, 150 Watts. Must be one Loud SOB
That's a really good deal. I'd jump all over that.
When you are paying $$$ to have your amp fixed by a professional technician....
Would you want to work on that PC board yourself?
I don't think so.
Besides only the service center is going to have schematics and updates.
Access to both sides of the board saves days of time considering the lifespan of the amplifier / how many times will it be serviced.
I have worked on many Mesa amps; it's wildly time consuming.
My fears are 2 fold, If something is wrong, how much is wrong and how much cost to fix? 2nd is It would likely never get full use from my novice playing.