I haven't had time to diagnose the tremolo yet, but I gave the Bandmaster its first real workout last night for a couple of hours. Plugged into lots of different cabs with different speakers. Mostly British style speakers, I'm a little short on American. The cabs included a 4x10 Marshall 1965A with celestions (bright and punchy), 2x12 Marshall 1966B with with WGS reapers (nice and full, well rounded tone), 2x12 Marshall 1936 with WGS Reaper and Green Beret (didn't like this one as much), 2x12 Sundown with WGS Green Berets (similar to 1966B but made out of MDF and heavy, sounds like rock & roll), 1x12 close back with Eminence Wizard (this was really nice), 1x12 close back with Weber Blue Dog Alnico (nice as well, but more compressed), 1x12 open back with Eminence Swamp Thang (eh). I have a WGS Black and Blue and a Weber Blue Dog Alnico that I want to put in an open back 2x12 cab. I might have to put them in the 1966B and leave the back off for testing. I've realized that changing speakers makes way more of a difference than changing resistors from CC to MF.
Overall, its a pretty nice sounding amp. You have to push it pretty hard and turn it up most of the way to get any read grind out of it, but I think that is typical of a Bandmaster.
There is a difference between the tweed and blackface channels, but not as much as I had hoped. Really seems to depend upon the guitar you are playing. There was a bigger difference with the Les Paul than with the Strat or the Les Paul Jr with P90s.
And... my bias checker still doesn't register any mA when plugged in. I'm going to re-check to make sure there all solder joints are correct (I did this once before but that was before it ever had tubes plugged into it). Might be a silly question, but can I measure mA another way to see if my meter is actually working?