I've got a Revolution 112 too...
The big diff' between the Revolution and the Bandit is the Ultra Channel on the Revo is ACTIVE. Put the EQ knobs at 12 noon on the Revo and they're equivalent to a Bandit dimed. This lets you dial in ridiculous amounts of bass for a 112 combo. In fact, two of the Revos living at my place showed up with dead Sheffield speakers, mostly likely thanks to the active eq.
I put an Eminence V12 in one and it's amazing for singing Boogie-esque leads, and will hang with a 412 cab. Much better efficiency and power handling than the stock Sheffield. The other got a Celestion Silver Series 80, which is similar to the Lead 80, but the V12 sounds better, IMHO.
Another difference with the Revolution is that the effects loop is footswitchable, but the reverb is NOT. That's cool if you want to put a delay and/or an EQ in the loop, but it's kind of a drag that you sacrifice the reverb footswitching to do it.
FWIW, I think I've posted this before, but the Revolution 112 uses the same footswitch and pin diagram as the XXL and Special 212 amps. The XXL footswitch is cool because the housing is metal and very rugged, and you can connect it with a standard DIN cable, which means if the cable goes bad, you can just replace it, no soldering.
Sadly, I haven't used my Revolutions in over a year. If I was gigging regularly the Revos would probably see more use. In the meanwhile, I've got two Black Box Bandits I use for teaching and practice. Been using one of those Bandits since 1998, nearly 20 years of continuous use, and it was already pretty road worn when I got it.