I've just joined the forum after lurking for a while, reading the many T-Series threads.
I own a T-xxx and a Leslie 122.
I've had them both since 1996.
The T has several issues which I've never had the time or inclination to fix until recently (been a global traveler for 10+ years).
There are a few missing harmonics on a few keys.
The reverb hums.
The vibrato sounds a little choppy but not ugly.
The drum scanner is noisy - I think the run motor is a replacement, the pulley & belt for the scanner are on the same side as the TG.
The scanner belt is poorly fitted around the run motor shaft near the spring.
The run motor does not have a rear shaft/pulley.
There are some very scratchy drawbars.
Internal Leslie & speakers are fine.
This is a studio-only instrument.
I'm not too fussed about the scanner noise because I record direct from the organ and re-amp through the Leslie so I don't get mechanical key/pedal/tabs noise in the ambient mics. (I have a one-room studio in my two-car garage space).
I've done step #1 of Carsten's mods: removing the upper & lower bus amp filters.
I've also tapped a line out from pin #3 of the recovery amp.
That's about the limit of my electronics skills.
The line out seems way too hot and it's pre-swell & reverb, so I've reverted back to my proven method of using the headphone out to a D.I. Box with 40dB pad on the input.
This is pretty noisy and hums but I use a noisegate prior to sending it to the 122.
The 122 has an inbuilt 2 channel preamp on the rear panel (I always face it backwards anyway, rock n roll style)
I run 1/4" into the 122 for re-amping, for live Hammond and for guitar.
A Blackstar HT-DistX pedal serves as tube distortion although the 122 has it's own awesome tube grind as well.
I have a tech who will perform the trickier standard mods later on (full key click, percussion, foldback, tapering, lower manual octave drop).
Here are my questions:
Where is the best place to tap a post-swell & reverb line out?
Likely cause of missing harmonics? (all tonewheels appear to be audible across the manuals)
Is running the headphone out to a padded D.I. Box harmful to the amp?
How to fix the backwards scanner so the belt goes on a proper pulley?
I'll post photos ASAP.
A YouTube demo will follow shortly
Thanks folks - it's great to be amongst such enlightened tonewheel aficionados!
I own a T-xxx and a Leslie 122.
I've had them both since 1996.
The T has several issues which I've never had the time or inclination to fix until recently (been a global traveler for 10+ years).
There are a few missing harmonics on a few keys.
The reverb hums.
The vibrato sounds a little choppy but not ugly.
The drum scanner is noisy - I think the run motor is a replacement, the pulley & belt for the scanner are on the same side as the TG.
The scanner belt is poorly fitted around the run motor shaft near the spring.
The run motor does not have a rear shaft/pulley.
There are some very scratchy drawbars.
Internal Leslie & speakers are fine.
This is a studio-only instrument.
I'm not too fussed about the scanner noise because I record direct from the organ and re-amp through the Leslie so I don't get mechanical key/pedal/tabs noise in the ambient mics. (I have a one-room studio in my two-car garage space).
I've done step #1 of Carsten's mods: removing the upper & lower bus amp filters.
I've also tapped a line out from pin #3 of the recovery amp.
That's about the limit of my electronics skills.
The line out seems way too hot and it's pre-swell & reverb, so I've reverted back to my proven method of using the headphone out to a D.I. Box with 40dB pad on the input.
This is pretty noisy and hums but I use a noisegate prior to sending it to the 122.
The 122 has an inbuilt 2 channel preamp on the rear panel (I always face it backwards anyway, rock n roll style)
I run 1/4" into the 122 for re-amping, for live Hammond and for guitar.
A Blackstar HT-DistX pedal serves as tube distortion although the 122 has it's own awesome tube grind as well.
I have a tech who will perform the trickier standard mods later on (full key click, percussion, foldback, tapering, lower manual octave drop).
Here are my questions:
Where is the best place to tap a post-swell & reverb line out?
Likely cause of missing harmonics? (all tonewheels appear to be audible across the manuals)
Is running the headphone out to a padded D.I. Box harmful to the amp?
How to fix the backwards scanner so the belt goes on a proper pulley?
I'll post photos ASAP.
A YouTube demo will follow shortly
Thanks folks - it's great to be amongst such enlightened tonewheel aficionados!
Comment