T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2978.1 | Never had one myself | GOES11::HOUSE | How could I have been so blind? | Wed Sep 21 1994 13:17 | 1 |
| So...where's the question?
|
2978.2 | Binson Echorec | LEDS::BURATI | this side up | Wed Sep 21 1994 13:18 | 9 |
|
Does anyone have or know of someone who has a Binson Echorec? I have one
that I'm trying to get working and I don't have a manual. I do have a
schematic but I need to know if and how tape is supposed to be loaded on
it. This unit is in a green galvinized steel enclosure with a plexiglass
front panel and a cool "electronic eye" for adjusting input level. It's
a vacuum tube design and is made in Europe.
--Ron
|
2978.3 | set the controls for the heart of the blues! | RICKS::CALCAGNI | There's no money to be made above the 5th fret | Thu Sep 22 1994 08:47 | 7 |
| Yowza! Where'd you find this beast? I believe the Binson Echorec
was Gilmore's warp-drive of choice during early/middle Pink Floyd.
Believe it or not, I have some information on these somewhere; will try
to dig it up.
/eugene
|
2978.4 | | LEDS::BURATI | this side up | Thu Sep 22 1994 10:48 | 15 |
| Please do, Eugene. Someone gave this for me to fix eons ago and just
left it with me. I tried to get it working. Couldn't figure out what's
wrong with it and put it aside to give back to the guy. So it sat there
for like 15 years waiting to be picked up. I think it's about time I got
it working.
It passes the dry signal fine, but there's no echo. Actually, it may be
that it just needs to be properly set up but the mechanics are baffling.
A rubber drive wheel turns a large steel disk (6" dia) that has 7 or 8
heads arranged around it. But there's no tape anywhere. Is the signal
encoded directly onto the disk without tape? Should there be tape?
I gotta know.
\sony boy williamson
|
2978.5 | direct-to-disk | RICKS::CALCAGNI | There's no money to be made above the 5th fret | Thu Sep 22 1994 10:55 | 4 |
| Actually, yeah. I think the recording is done onto the disk; there are
no tapes.
/dingus
|
2978.6 | | LEDS::BURATI | this side up | Thu Sep 22 1994 11:25 | 4 |
| Wewll then, that wou' explain the lack of tape, then wou'nt it? But
then, that's the bloody whyee I been trying to ge' it to work.
\mr. sting
|
2978.7 | hiss vs. too-clean? | CRONIC::PCUMMINGS | Twelve Sandwich Blues | Wed Sep 28 1994 19:12 | 11 |
| Still on the topic, but off the initial note, I use a Roland RE-150
tape echo which is great, but VERY noisey. Wish I could find some
way to stifle the 'surf effect'. Anybody have a clue ? Are there
any decent noise gates on the market ? And if so, do they negatively
effect the sound in other ways ?
Just haven't heard one of 'dem DIG-IT-AL units that doesn't
sound somewhat brittle.......
/old_timer
|
2978.8 | | LEDS::BURATI | six strings down | Wed Sep 28 1994 21:41 | 12 |
| Paul,
It seems to me that standard encode/decode NR like dbx would do the job.
Probably type II dbx rather than the type I (which requires that you
have a lot of hi freq head room, type II is designed for applications
with limited HF response).
The only problem is that you need to buy two channels of NR just to get
one. But I'll bet it would clean up the Roland's hiss nicely. After all
it's just a little tape machine.
--Ron
|
2978.9 | Loop-dee-loo | SPESHR::WAIBLE | | Tue Oct 04 1994 12:33 | 20 |
| Ron and .7:
YOu know i havent seen a tape echo in many years but the one i did
see actually did have tape in it. I can remember being fascinated by
it.
The guy that was playing it opened it up for me and said that the
tape had to be replaced every now and then. i cant rememeber it too
well; seems like there was a window that allowed you to see the tape
loop and also allowed access for changing it. It was much longer than
the unit itself. i.e. it was 5 or 6 feet of tape that somehow was
spooled on a coninuous loop. YOu varied the delay time by a slide bar
that moved the two play heads farther apart.
.7 if yours has tape in it, replacing the tape may cure some of
your noise problems.
keep on rockin',
Fred
|
2978.10 | copycat | RDGENG::AFRY | | Wed Oct 05 1994 08:26 | 9 |
| Showing my age here but I remember the WEM Copycat tape echo unit - my
brother's band at school used one - a blue (and white?), fabric
covered, lidded box about 12" x 7" x 4". The tapes were forever
breaking - they were only about 20 inch loops of standard 1/4" tape.
But at the time, to us, this unit was the be-all-and-end-all of effects
(other than the famous Hank Marvin Strat tremolo, of course....)
Andrew (exit humming Apache)
|
2978.11 | ECHO..Echo..echo | KIRKTN::JHYNDMAN | | Thu Oct 06 1994 04:23 | 7 |
| Re: WEM copycat.
My Dad still has one of those. I always remember making up a loop of
tape about 4 feet and holding it out using a mike stand,getting very
long repeats out of it. These have a record head and three playback
heads,with a control to adjust the volume of the playbacks.
Jim.
|
2978.12 | | LARVAE::BRIGGS_R | | Fri Oct 07 1994 04:56 | 7 |
|
I think WEM have recently gone back into production with the Copy Cat.
I seem to remember its solid sate now but still has the tape.
Richard_who_may_have_been_dreaming_but_whose_pretty_sure_he's_right
Basingstoke
|
2978.13 | Hello, hello, hello.....! | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Sat Oct 29 1994 20:40 | 21 |
| I just become the owner of a genuine Echoplex tape echo unit (thanks,
Andy!). This is one of the solid state models. It's in great shape.
A little armour-all and it looks like new. The cover is removable
and inside is a description of all the controls. There is a notation
inside that says "For Factory service send to: Market Electronics,
Cleveland, Ohio". Apparantly it's one of the later models made after
Maestro sold the company. I doubt if Market Elec. is still in business.
This unit works fine in both echo and sound-on-sound modes. It brings
back memories. I used to play in a band with a guy that had one just
like it. Fortunately, I have a source for new replacement tapes for
this. It just so happens that Jim Dunlop sells a replacement for it.
They list it as an "ECH-01 Echoplex Tape cartridge" and they sell
them direct for $20.95. Their phone number is 707-745-2722. Fax is
707-745-2658. Jim Dunlop will sell any of their products direct,
however, they charge full list price since they do not want to compete
with their dealers. Theses tapes may be available for less money
through a Jim Dunlop dealer. I'll have to check around before paying
the list price.
Mark
|