Re: Worst Hammond Organ
"dec wrote the following post at 07-22-2003 4:19 AM: </P>
<DIV class=ForumReplyToPostArea>Easy question. Any model beginning with a "J". You may also place anything made after the Australian firm purchased Hammond. But, by far, the "J" series were the pits."</DIV>
<U>i disagree.</U></P>
iused to have an M3, more or less the "baby B3." a respectable, good quality organ, but having grown up on the sounds of the Doors, Strawberry Alarm Clock, Music Emporiumand the Animals, it lacked, by my definition, the "ass" it takes to aggressively cut through a mix of drums, guitar, and bass.</P>
the J-412 i found ditched in an alley, however,has mucho cajones. A combination of the flute 16', cello 16', violin 8' and oboe 8' does the "light my fire" vox sound better than a bloody VOX does. i also find the vibrato to be more lush and flexible than either the M-3 or the VOX.</P>
ive been trying to find a way to chop it B-3 style and nix the onboard solidstate amp for a while now. im just not electronically savvy enough. that would probably be my only gripe about it - that wussy little amp sucks. but the built-in leslie rotary speaker kind of makes up for it.</P>
as for durability, i moved my M3 all of once (to get it into the house) and the vibrato scanner went all wonky (see: "motorboating"), and the startup motor pin started to jam. lovely.</P>
this J-412 sat in an alley unattended in ALASKA (eg, 9 months of winter) for years.it was cracked and grey and dried out, filthy and covered in dead insects,dried up leaves, stained and brittle. i took it home, repainted it (blue!), reupholstered the grille,and all it required beyond that was a mere cleaning to start right back up and work as new, like it had never been left out in the first place. that was a year and a half ago and it has yet to break or go out of tune.</P>
so, i cant really abide by the logic that declares the J-series to be the worst. if by worst you mean "least popular," then yeah, it probably was. pitting anytransistorized organ against the immense popularity of the tonewheels is pointless - they dont really do the same things, andtonewheels will always be more popular by a landslide.</P>
but this thing has given me more smiles than any organ before it. i must sing it's praises, if no one else will. if i could find one of these brand new NOS, id nab it in a half a heartbeat.</P>
"dec wrote the following post at 07-22-2003 4:19 AM: </P>
<DIV class=ForumReplyToPostArea>Easy question. Any model beginning with a "J". You may also place anything made after the Australian firm purchased Hammond. But, by far, the "J" series were the pits."</DIV>
<U>i disagree.</U></P>
iused to have an M3, more or less the "baby B3." a respectable, good quality organ, but having grown up on the sounds of the Doors, Strawberry Alarm Clock, Music Emporiumand the Animals, it lacked, by my definition, the "ass" it takes to aggressively cut through a mix of drums, guitar, and bass.</P>
the J-412 i found ditched in an alley, however,has mucho cajones. A combination of the flute 16', cello 16', violin 8' and oboe 8' does the "light my fire" vox sound better than a bloody VOX does. i also find the vibrato to be more lush and flexible than either the M-3 or the VOX.</P>
ive been trying to find a way to chop it B-3 style and nix the onboard solidstate amp for a while now. im just not electronically savvy enough. that would probably be my only gripe about it - that wussy little amp sucks. but the built-in leslie rotary speaker kind of makes up for it.</P>
as for durability, i moved my M3 all of once (to get it into the house) and the vibrato scanner went all wonky (see: "motorboating"), and the startup motor pin started to jam. lovely.</P>
this J-412 sat in an alley unattended in ALASKA (eg, 9 months of winter) for years.it was cracked and grey and dried out, filthy and covered in dead insects,dried up leaves, stained and brittle. i took it home, repainted it (blue!), reupholstered the grille,and all it required beyond that was a mere cleaning to start right back up and work as new, like it had never been left out in the first place. that was a year and a half ago and it has yet to break or go out of tune.</P>
so, i cant really abide by the logic that declares the J-series to be the worst. if by worst you mean "least popular," then yeah, it probably was. pitting anytransistorized organ against the immense popularity of the tonewheels is pointless - they dont really do the same things, andtonewheels will always be more popular by a landslide.</P>
but this thing has given me more smiles than any organ before it. i must sing it's praises, if no one else will. if i could find one of these brand new NOS, id nab it in a half a heartbeat.</P>
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