M
metalj
New member
What? Sell the Marshall and get a Peavey?
QUOTE=357mag;3228882]What? Sell the Marshall and get a Peavey?
Yes that is good advice IF he wants to use the Metal Zone pedal as his sound.
I was wrong in my earlier post about the Valvstate Marshalls, they are solid state. I was thinking AVT's for some reason. Been a while since Ive seen or heard of the Valvstate.
I completely agree with above posts that tube is the way to go as I personally use Hughes and Kettners.
I will repeat one thing about that Pedal. It can be a very good sounding metal pedal with the right amp. I cant stress enough that it needs a very flat sounding solid state amp with ALOT of headroom on the clean channel. I used to use this as a backup and for practice so I didnt use my tube life up and I didnt want to leave my expensive gear in a studio a long ways from me.
In real life, I dont know if they even make a solid state amp now a days in any brand that would live up the above statement. They all are "modling" themselves after Line 6 with built in effects, a super heavily voiced preamp, super heavy digital distortion already built in so adding a MT-2 to that is just over kill and will not sound good.
Maybe a Tech21 amp has lots of clean power and a uneffected pre-amp, maybe a Carvin solid state amp? Peavy's XXL amp was a good one for that but I dont think they make them anymore.
All Im trying to help the OP with is if he want to contine the use of the MT-2pedal. If so then you need to find an amp that will fit the pedal. Becuse no matter where you set the EQ on this pedal flat or not, it has a prevoiced sound to it right from the get go that will only work with certain amps. That is if you want it to sound good and it will sound GOOD with that type of amp.
All the bad comments about this pedal is probably because it was not matched up with the right gear. The users probably just tried to use it with whatever amp they currentely had resulting in a bad match up of gear.
You can stick the MT-2 in front of any amp, but what amp will it sound really good with and get you a useable live or studio sound? That is the question for the OP isnt it? The answer to that question is a solid state amp with a flat sounding clean channel with lots of headroom. Also, This is to get you above bedroom level volumes. If you are jamming with a band you need this type of amp with this pedal to get you a decent sound to cut through the mix and not feedback.
Im darn near temped now to do a recording with my old practice set up and post it. Maybe I have an old recording Ill try to dig up.
Alrighty then. Good luck.