BrandonS
Well-known member
MarkBass 102 (2x10) combo works just fine. ON occasion I also hook up an Eden 2x10 I got at a swap meet for around $60
tons of sound with them both!
Yes that is the one. Although it was the official MB distributor that did the swap for me, because I didn't want to void the warranty by opening the amp, it's all a very easy task as they are all compatible for retrofitting with all the Mark Bass combo's which use the Little Mark head I, II or III models, basically you must remove the top cover from the new head, keep that by one side as you will need it later, unscrew the old head from the combo enclosure, pull it out, slide the new one in and fit the top cover from the new one onto the one you've just pulled out of the amp. Screw in the new head inside the combo cabinet and that's all you need to do. Easy as a,b,c.
Every time I've tried using a 2x10 on it's own I've noticed that even if I can get it loud enough, I'm pushing it hard enough to produce audible power compression initially, sometimes progressing to actual distortion. Once you get there, you're not far of physical damage.
I'm actually talking about headroom of a different kind. Watts are nice but I'm referring to available suspension travel within the driver mechanism. If your 10's have 4mm of suspension travel (X-max) and reach it at say 200W, it makes no difference if your amp is running at 8 tenths or 2 tenths if the speaker is operating 4mm away from it's suspended center.Pete, depends on how much headroom you have up your sleeve. I agree with you if you're talking about a 300w head trying to push a 2x10 to keep up with a loud rock band. However, when I've run a 2x10 by itself at pub gigs it's been fed one channel of a pre/power amp rig that has 600-750 watts available into that 8 ohm cab, so pushing the cab hard has not been an issue.
Every time I've tried using a 2x10 on it's own I've noticed that even if I can get it loud enough, I'm pushing it hard enough to produce audible power compression initially, sometimes progressing to actual distortion. Once you get there, you're not far of physical damage.
Try the new TC Electronic RS210s. Fantastic sound, sweet high end, small, pretty light for ceramic, and loud!
Two would be awesome, but you may get away with one occasionally.