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Clocking in at a staggering 550W, Fender's new three-channel head should be classed as a dangerous weapon.
Simon Bradley, Tue 23 Oct 2007, 12:08 pm BST
The livery of Fender's new Metalhead - all black vinyl, flight-case fittings and chrome pots - leaves the casual observer in no doubt as to its primary function: to rock. And to do so at a volume that would blow the kneecaps clean off more staid players.
Even the accompanying literature features words such as 'assault', 'gut-wrenching' and 'heavy' to leave us in no doubt as to what we're dealing with.
It's usual for bass amps to have wattage in the high hundreds simply because of the headroom required, but guitarists can make do with anything between 50 and 100 watts for virtually any gig that's likely to come up.
The MH-500 is rated at 550 watts at two ohms when used with a pair of MH-412 cabs - with one cab the power is slightly reduced to 400 watts - and believe us, that is extremely high.
When Fender says that you'll need the pack of 25 earplugs included with each MH-500, they aren't exaggerating.
The amp is 100 per cent solid-state and boasts a power amp stage that Fender makes no bones about telling us originates from amps such as the 400 Pro from the Pro Bass series.
Elsewhere proceedings are divided between three separate channels, each with a distinct voicing and, to this end, each offers its own EQ section, too.
It's to Fender's eternal credit that included in the amp's RRP is a sturdy four-way footswitch that allows you to select your chosen channel.
This also allows you to access the boost function, which hikes the volume of your selection to a level determined by the associated pot on the amp's front panel.
Its final function is to switch in or out one of 16 effects that the amp also includes. Selected via a rotary pot, the choice includes a number of reverbs, delays, choruses and flangers plus a phaser, vibrato and a gate that doubles as a noise reducer and automatic mute.
Loose Drive is voiced for producing the full gamut of classic and hard rock tones, while the Tight Drive channel is best suited for all manner of contemporary metal.
However, we'll begin with the clean channel as, in our experience, it's these tones that are best suited to solid-state amps.
Don't make the mistake of assuming that only hard-driving tones will benefit from the additional push afforded by a 412 cabinet: the clean tones here are as good as from any other Fender amp, classic or otherwise, and that's saying something.
The crystal-clear headroom afforded by the huge powerage is rounded out by the above-average performance of the closed-back cab that offers over 155 cubic litres of air to give a genuinely excellent clean tone.
By using the Loose Drive channel you'll transform into the loudest, filthiest metal player at the merest flick of the four-way switch.
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Fantastic vibe and gain. Plenty of headroom. Powerful boost function. the effects and the clean performance.
The Tight Drive channel was disappointing.
A truly loud amp but it's tone might not satisfy everyone.
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MH-500 Metalhead