Hello groovers, here we are for my review of the Mesa V-Twin distortion pedal Um, a little bit about it first, the general gist of it The first thing you are going to notice, it's a big pedal it's quite heavy as well and it's made like a tank it's a really big solid metal pedal which I think is great if you are going to go out on the road then this is going to be a good sturdy, touring companion the first thing to do, interesting about it is the power supply so it's not like a regular pedal that you can just plug in, like plug into a 9-volt power supply it's got a big "wah-wah" thing you know, like, that you have to plug into the main power socket that's the first thing to make sure that you are aware of if it means that you are having your pedals at the front of the stage you're going to have to run a power supply out to this particular pedal if it's the only one you are using although, most pedals you will have to have some sort of power supply anyway but it definitely doesn't run on batteries What I'm gonna do now, before we actually listen to it is go through and do a close up and I'll explain all of the different bits, what they do and then we'll start playing it and have a bit of fun so, here we go well, here is our Mesa Engineering V-Twin distortion pedal possibly one of the best and fanciest distortion pedals I've ever had and probably that's ever been made, really I'm not even sure if they still make one exactly the same as this one anymore Let me go through and explain the basic features of it first thing, we've got two buttons on there The first one is, you can see it lights up the little red light there is a bypass switch which basically in effect, turns the pedal off so when the lights on, it's not working click that on and your pedal is then in action Now this one changes between a few different things depending on how you set it up with this center button depressed it's going from clean (clicks button) Click it on, and it goes to solo sound which is kind of a lead guitar kind of, you know, big heavy metal sound if you've got the button up it goes from blues (clicks button) to solo so two different distortions of course, your regular state if the amps in bypass would give you a clean sound and then, if you turn that off (clicks button) you've got a blues sound (clicks) kick that on for your lead solo (clicks) and then back to your rhythym sound (clicks) back to your clean sound, so it effectively gives you three channels of distortion so, or two channels of distortion and bypass, which will leave you clean it's got a really good range of EQ on this one we've got gain, of course which is how much distortion you've got you've got bass, middle, treble, and presence which are all EQ so very versatile for your EQ sounds and of course, you've got a master volume over there which will sort out your overall level now you can see inside this little cage part here is actually two real valves which I can actually pop out I probably shouldn't be doing this without turning the power off but just so you can have a little of a look-see, this comes off and they've got actually two proper AX7, I think yeah, AX7 valves I've got Mesa Boogie ones in there but you can, of course, put other valves in there if you wish it does change the sound a bit but, to be honest I've been pretty happy with the ones in there so, I really haven't had to do a whole lot to that let's put that cage back in before I show you anything else okay, so, other features if we look over the back here you see, we've got quite a few little holes here so, the first one is the instrument input pretty obvious external bypass which will turn the pedal on and off from an external source like a channel switching thing which you can use a seperate pedal for I don't know why you'd wanna do that an external select, which changes, is kind of an external way of changing your channel I use that with my TC Electronic G System and that, the G system, can change the channel for me depending on what sound I want and when so that's kind of a pretty useful feature we've also got, on the back here now, we've got a two-guitar amp two power amp and mixer/headphones now, of course, if you're using it with a guitar amplifier you are gonna plug your output from here into your guitar amplifier if you are using a power amp that doesn't have a pre-amp, like doesn't have a clean sound or whatever directly into your power-amp you would use this to the power-amp so they're slightly different they've got a different EQ depending on what output of the pedal you are going to use and then also, you have this mixer/headphones which means that if you were just playing at home and you wanted to really rock in distortion you could plug your headphones directly into here and listen to it from that also if you wanted to go directly into a mixing disk if gives you kind of a speaker simulation kind of effect by plugging it straight into the disk I have done a few gigs with this plugged straight into the disc and it sounds pretty good it's probably the best of this type of effect you know the speaker simulation that I've come across except the Mesa Boogey recording pre-amp which is what I use most of the time in my rig it's also got one switch over here which changes between mixers and headphones of course, that only really works if you are using the mixer/headphone output there another interesting thing, which I didn't discover for a while is it's got a couple of switches on the back here you can see I've got the screw missing from here so I can just flip it open you can see there that this one is a clean gain adjust so you can adjust the volume of your clean sound which is a really useful feature if your clean sound is a bit too quiet you need a really small little screwdriver to get in there and also you've got a switch here solo to blues which can change over instead of having clean, if we flip it back over here to, we've got this here going blues and solo we can have that going here, clean to solo if you put that switch on instead of going clean to solo it goes clean to blues (guitar playing) this is now in bypass mode, so (guitar playing) that's kind of our starting sound it's going through my Mesa Boogey Express Amplifier and I'm using a Telecaster but it's kind of hotted up a bit so I'm using the bridge pickup (guitar playing) so that's the pedal not functioning so the first thing, let's have a look at the effect of using the clean channels so I've just turned bypass off (guitar playing) That's the Boogey clean so bypass (plays guitar) with the clean sound (guitar playing) kind of makes it a lot warmer it's a really good effect here that gives it that really "valve-y" warm clean sound which I think is a really cool trick okay, (clicks) so now lets kick it over to here (clicks) and let's start off by listening to the blues channel, so (guitar playing) generally, really really solid little blues sound really nice (guitar playing) not too heavy, not too light just right of course we've got a gain adjustment here so if we turn the gain right down we're not getting any sound (guitar playing progressively louder) and on the blues channel (guitar playing) you're still getting quite a lot of distortion there I don't know if you can see on here or not I've got these little black lines all over the amplifier pedals just to remind me where the pedal settings go in case I knock them it's not a bad idea to get into the habit of doing that (guitar playing) so, there's your blues sound from quite a clean, you know (guitar playing) clean (guitar playing) hardly any distortion on the blues so you can get (guitar playing) up to quite a gnarly kind of distortion but it's still very blues-y now, if we flip that over to solo sound (guitar playing) we're straight away into proper rock territory (guitar playing) let's turn that presence up a little bit (guitar playing) really, really, really good solid lead guitar sound from this pedal it really has, this is kind of all bells and whistles great having the three channels so it really is, for me, this is kind of the best distortion pedal that I ever had I still use it all the time, it's great, it's a bit big so it's a little bit of a pain on the old pedal board but, other than that this is really a top-notch pedal well I hope you enjoyed my little talk-through the Mesa Boogey V-Twin Pedal great pedal, yeah, I really really rate it I've had it for quite a few years now and it's, yeah, really is my favorite distortion pedal yeah, I hope that's cool go and check them out in a shop near you and see if you dig it as much as I do take care guys I'll see you for another review soon bye-bye!