T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1372.1 | Have Just What You Need | ROLL::BEFUMO | Twenty-First Century Schizoid Man | Wed May 11 1988 16:09 | 3 |
| yeah Mike, I've got just what you need - it stands about 4' high,
weighs around 200# . . .
joe
|
1372.2 | I wasn't going to say it... | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Let's keep sax and violins on TV | Thu May 12 1988 09:36 | 17 |
|
re: .-1
But since you did... I have a model 45 Leslie, original tube amp,
weighs about 125 pounds, Jensen speakers (original), beat up cabinet,
not-original DC servo motors which I installed in 1978 when I was
on the road and wanted slo-mo Leslie (infinite variability). I have
a servo amp for it but I haven't even fired the thing up in 6 years,
I've just been hauling it around because I couldn't bear to leave
it behind...
Of course, you've tried an Effectron? Lots cheaper, ever so much
lighter, and it fits in a rack. Of course Deltalab is out of business
now, but an Effectron in flange mode works pretty well if you make
the delay time long enough.
/pjh
|
1372.3 | Aw darn! | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The height of MIDIocrity | Thu May 12 1988 09:40 | 14 |
| Is Deltalab really out of business? I bought one of the very first
ADM-1024's and it rapidly became very important to me (I love delay
effects and tricks).
Anyway, I had to get it fixed once and was delighted to discover that
their headquarters was just a ways down 93 from my place. I have this
recollection that they were bought out by someone rather than going
out of business.
Anyway, I sure hope not, cause it was really nice to bring the thing
in on a Wednesday and have it back the following Monday. Of course,
it'll be a moot point when (and if) I get my H-3000. ;-)
db
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1372.4 | DeltaLab is part of ADS | AQUA::ROST | Lizard King or Bozo Dionysius? | Thu May 12 1988 09:58 | 9 |
|
Re: DeltaLab
DeltaLab was bought up by ADS, and they do indeed do service at
their plant in MA. It's right off 93, I forget the town.
However, I haven't seen anything new from them for a while....
|
1372.5 | What does a Leslie simulator do? | PANGLS::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Thu May 12 1988 10:36 | 12 |
| Apropos of a leslie effect, can anybody tell me what the leslie
does (acoustically) to the sound?
I have tried various combinations of filter cutoff, amplitude
modulation and pitch modulation without complete success.
Is the function triangular, sinusoidal, saw-tooth, square, or something
else?
Thanks,
Steph
|
1372.6 | Ahhh, the Leslie.... | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Let's keep sax and violins on TV | Thu May 12 1988 14:37 | 48 |
|
re: leslie effect
The mathematics of the effect are horrendous but the physical
act is pretty simple to understand.
A Leslie, or rotating speaker system, usually consists of a two-way
speaker system, which contains a downward-facing woofer and a horn
midrange speaker. The horn driver faces upwards, and the horn itself
is bent at about an 85 degree angle. If you peek at one you will
notice two horns; actually, sound only comes out one of them, the
other is plugged, and is there for mechanical balance. The woofer
points downward into a rotating drum, which has an angled 45 degree
baffle. The Leslie cabinet has louvers on both the bottom and the
top, and although most cabinets have an unfinished backside, the
louvers extend 360 degrees around the cabinet.
The net result of a Leslie is to provide a Doppler effect by
continuously redirecting sound in a radial pattern. The important
thing to note is that there are two components to the sound from
a Leslie, and they are treated differently: The midrange/high
components are directly radiated (i.e. pointed at the walls and
bounced), and the bass components are reflected first. This actually
makes a difference, as anyone who has ever used a multi-speed Leslie
knows. The Doppler effect is less pronounced when the speaker/drum
is turning slowly (phase shift), and becomes much more pronounced
when the speaker/drum is turning quickly (pitch shift). It's close
to the effect of an Effectron or similar delay being set to a 50ms
to 75 ms delay time, and modulated at about a 2-5% depth at a varying
modulation frequency, and then feeding that output to a digital
delay set for a medium-sized room. I shiver to think of the mathematic
equation but it has a lot of sigmas and f(n)s in it.
The real trick is the bottom drum, which rotates at a different
rate than the top, and especially, as you change speed, it winds
down at a different rate than the horn (conversely, it winds up
at a different rate).
The other characteristic of the Leslie was that it was a hardwood
box (at least mine is), and the woofer (15") is in a non-ported
acoustic suspension box. Extremely characteristic sound provided
by the enclosure itself is tough to duplicate.
Wonderful idea from a time that produced other such wonders as
the echoplex, the spring reverb, and the whammy bar.
/pjh
|
1372.7 | Reminiscing Uselessly | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Fri May 13 1988 16:03 | 11 |
| Sometime in the recallable past there was an ad for and a review
of a no-holds-barred leslie simulator in one of the music mags
(keyboard or EM or MSO or something). This rack mount unit even
simulated the different speeds and rate of changes of speeds for
the woofer and midrange systems. It was a tad expensive, around
$600 if I recall correctly (which I very well may not). I doubt
I can find the issue in question in the sea of magazines slowly
threatening to take (if they haven't already taken) over my apartment.
len.
|
1372.8 | Dynacord I think... | CLULES::SPEED | If it doesn't rack, it doesn't roll | Fri May 13 1988 16:24 | 5 |
| I think the box Len refered to is made by Dynacord. I have never
seen one, or heard one, but I too would be interested in hearing
from someone who has.
Derek
|
1372.9 | Articles on Leslie, Tremulants | FGVAXZ::LAING | Jim*261-2194*DEC MemorabiliaCollector | Mon May 16 1988 14:06 | 7 |
| I have (somewhere) several articles on the development of the Leslie,
as well as mathematical descriptions of the pipe-organ TREMULANT,
on which the Leslie was based (or should I say, which the Leslie
itself was attempting to simulate). If you're interested, send
me MAIL and I can dig these articles out ...
-Jim Laing FGVAXZ::LAING
|
1372.10 | "Ain't nothin like the real thing, baby" | NCVAX1::STEINHARDT | Send lawyers, guns, and money | Mon Jun 20 1988 17:29 | 9 |
| As the owner of a Leslie 145, I have yet to find anything that produces
quite the same overall sound and effect as the real thing. I can
use some help, however, in trouble shooting an occasional problem
that I have with the beast. At sporadic momments, particularly
at fast speed, the breaker trips on the pre-amp. Do I simply need
new tubes, or should I be also seeking out a solid-state alternative?
- Ken
|
1372.11 | | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Hell's only command: 'SET' | Tue Jun 21 1988 09:38 | 11 |
|
re: .-1
Have you oiled your speaker bearings and the bearings on the drum
lately? There are oil holes specifically for this purpose. If you
have a higher load then the motor drive current might contribute...
Which amp do you have in the 145? There were three different tube
models. What type are your power tubes?
/pjh
|
1372.12 | "...totally tubular..." | NCVAX1::STEINHARDT | Send lawyers, guns, and money | Tue Jun 21 1988 12:45 | 6 |
| It has a 147 amp, and a Leslie "Combo" preamp, which specifies use
with 145's or 147's. The output tubes are two 6550's.
Cheers,
Ken
|
1372.13 | | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Hell's only command: 'SET' | Tue Jun 21 1988 14:35 | 6 |
|
Hmm. When was the last time you changed the rectifier tube? And
how old (and how many hours) on the tubes?
Of course, the breaker could be soft too...
|
1372.14 | "10 O'Clock and All's Well" | NCVAX1::STEINHARDT | Send lawyers, guns, and money | Fri Jun 24 1988 11:09 | 7 |
| I replaced all the tubes, cleaned and lubed the motors, and...Voila!!!
No more problem.
Thanks!!!
Ken-who-is-happy-to-have-his-leslie-back
|
1372.15 | great! | ARGUE::HARRIMAN | Hell's only command: 'SET' | Fri Jun 24 1988 11:18 | 11 |
|
re: .-1
bingo. How bad were the motors, out of curiosity?
I ended up replacing the AC motors in my '45 with DC servo motors.
Of course, it helped to be (at the time) a test technician in a
DC servo motor factory... But it got me variable speed and less
oiling.
/pjh
|
1372.16 | clean machine | NCVAX1::STEINHARDT | Send lawyers, guns, and money | Fri Jun 24 1988 16:22 | 6 |
| I'm really not sure how bad they were, but they were dirty and noisy,
and now they're clean and quiet.
Cheers,
Ken
|
1372.17 | noisy? | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Hell's only command: 'SET' | Fri Jun 24 1988 17:39 | 6 |
|
ahhh. That was the problem, then. more friction = more current.
Happy tremulating.
/pjh
|
1372.18 | Dynacord CLS222 | CLULES::SPEED | Rock is MUCH easier than this | Wed Oct 19 1988 11:19 | 13 |
| Anyone remember this note?
I believe the unit folks are using is something called a CLS222 from
Dynacord.
I haven't been able to find anything on this unit at all at music
stores or in back issues of _Keyboard_.
Has anyone seen a review of this beast of even an ad?
Thanks,
Derek_who's_back_to_COMMUSIC_after_a_long_absence
|
1372.19 | Route to Dynacord | WARMTH::KENT | Edd Case | Wed Oct 19 1988 12:05 | 8 |
|
My local (tame) Music Shop is Dynacord main agent for the U.K. If
you want me to dig into this in more detail. I.E. go and find out.
Then let me know.
Paul.
|
1372.20 | Still interested. | MAY26::DIORIO | | Wed Oct 19 1988 12:31 | 5 |
|
RE -1 Yeah Paul, that would be great if you could get some info.
I've heard that these Dynacord units are good but expensive.
Mike D
|
1372.21 | Me too! | CLULES::SPEED | Rock is MUCH easier than this | Wed Oct 19 1988 13:52 | 5 |
| Yes, I am also still interested. If you get any brochures, etc.,
could you send me a copy? My mailstop is MLO1-2/C30.
Thanks,
Derek
|
1372.22 | Quadraverb does it quite well. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - boycott hell. | Wed Sep 06 1989 11:04 | 18 |
| To resurrect an old topic, the Alesis Quadraverb has very nice Leslie
simlulation algorithm. And, since you can modulate up to 8 different
parameters via MIDI CCs, the thing is quite flexible.
Modulation routings, off the topic of my head -
1. STEREO SEPARATION spread of treble/bass across stereo image
2. MOTOR ON/OFF gradual speed-up and slow-down!
3. MOTOR SPEED slow or fast, again gradual
4. HI ROTOR LEVEL to increase treble presence
5. MIX LEVEL wet/dry signal ratio
Map aftertouch to 1, 2 & 3, mod wheel to 4 & 5 and you have a killer
Leslie simulator.
For what it's worth.
-b
|
1372.23 | I always seem to want to edit the uneditable parameters... | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | The sea refuses no river... | Wed Sep 06 1989 12:27 | 3 |
| I didn't think the Quadraverb leslie went fast enough.....
dbii
|
1372.24 | Quadraverb vs Leslie? | STKAI2::HALL | | Tue May 29 1990 08:34 | 8 |
| This note is up and running again!
I did not see an end to this conversation. Is the Quadraverb able
to create a _GOOD_ leslie effect and could the "motor speed" be
varied with an on/off pedal??
Torbjorn
|
1372.25 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Nice computers don't go down | Tue May 29 1990 10:27 | 8 |
| re: QV questions
define good, I think it's ok, the motor speed doesn't go fast enough for me
yes you can control the speed with a pedal I think.....seems like you can
control any parameter with a pedal
dbii
|
1372.26 | Leslie motor speed control = 1 bit | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Is there, like, a book or something? | Tue May 29 1990 10:45 | 10 |
| The QV leslie sounds pretty good to me- however the "motor speed" is
either FAST or SLOW, no continuous control. They _could_ have done
continuous control, because it doesn't switch between fast and slow
instantly, it takes several seconds and the QV simulates the sound
of a Leslie spooling up. So, clearly, there's a word in memory
somewhere that is the current "leslie speed"; but you can't
get to it from MIDI. (at least I don't know how to get to it.)
-Bill
|
1372.27 | More questions :-) | STKAI2::HALL | | Wed May 30 1990 05:42 | 16 |
| Ok, thanks for your input. Next question regarding spinning up and
down; Is it slowly spinning BOTH up and down? i.e when you go from
SLOW to FAST and and also when going from FAST to SLOW.
I think this effect is the most unique in leslie simulation.
Is the FAST and SLOW speeds programmable ( I know they are not
controlled via MIDI commands) in the QV preset? Is the stereo effect
heavy noticable??
As I'm currently investigating in getting another FX (already have
a MV II), getting one with a fairly good leslie simulation is
preferred. Are there any other similar multi FX (ART??) with leslie
simulation??
Torbjorn
|
1372.28 | Sorry, sorry, and yep | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | We don't need that part. | Thu May 31 1990 16:49 | 8 |
| Nope, the speeds at FAST and SLOW are not programmable, nor is the
rate programmable. And yes, it does take it's time both spooling
up and spooling down. (and the rates are different, as I recall).
The stereo effect can get pretty heavy.
-Bill
|