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Those Marshall V30’s are my favorite V30’s. They sound killer.
That’s EXACTLY how I heard the Marshall V30. They sound phenomenal. No comparison to the Chinese versions. Not even close, imho. And I was playing my SLO through them at the time, which I absolutely hated with Chinese V30’s.I have some 2004 8 ohms Mesa v30’s that sound amazing but these have this extra clarity while not being harsh, which has left me baffled.
If you don't get a proper answer to this you will find threads in which the speaker stamping people just got something wrong.still looking for an answer to why it's missing a letter
You must be a bot. What sentient human would ever use the phrase ‘speaker stamping people’ to describe factory line workers as if that is their only task there, to stamp speakers. That and your over reliance on graphs and charts which can never document the intangible aspects of sound. Where’s Sarah Conner when you need her?If you don't get a proper answer to this you will find threads in which the speaker stamping people just got something wrong.
No where are there any other stamps, date codes etc,.. I looked again just a few days ago. The only thing I found was another "Marshall Barcode" sticker another one of the speakers.And, to throw another wrench into this speaker the first version 8ohm from 85-86 sounds very different than the 16 ohm versions of today. I picked up a 1988 800 cab with the 8 ohm Vintages...These are warm, fat sounding speakers that have a much more 'relaxed' top end that differs greatly to the later 90s 16 ohm version. They almost sound like G12 65s with a more prominent midrange.
OP, is there a stamp on the frame anywhere? Date codes used to be there...