Andy keeps telling everybody how essential to the organ experience a Leslie is, especially to the X77, and I wonder. I like the simulated stereo vibrato I get from my H100 just fine. I don't use all that much vibrato, anyway, just as a garnish.
Running all those X77 signals out through the legs to an external power amp, and possibly back again to a reverb tank, runs of 3 to 8', was just asking for hum. I hear they got it.
The H100 is very similar to the X77 but the runs are about 3' to a 3 channel power amp, back up to the reverb switches, and down again to the power amp. That works fine. No hum.
So IMHO copy the H100 wiring. The schematics are on archive.org: the whole service manual. The precious metal plate tab switches are a great feature, it is just al that wiring that was not, IMHO. The cool thing, you can put a digital reverb effect up in the top, not all the way down past the power amp on the low keys end. With a wall transformer driven effects unit, you don't even have to run 120 VAC up in to the high gain area of the tab box. The power amp would fit up in the top, too, with IC amps.
With high performance tubes being a scarce commodity, energy costing $.42 a KWH, and everybody hating the H100 so badly for the sound of the 71 dried up electrolytic capacitors they are never going to change, I'm thinking of putting the whole power amp up on top of the keyboards of my 2nd and 3rd units, shotgun replacing everything original with modern parts. Replacing the whole electronics package after the four 12 pin AMP plugs on the back of the tab box. Also making a few of the same for sale, if all the H100 haven't gone to the landfill already. It is a marvelously expressive organ, all under tab control, no screens or levels of menus or pre-programming required of your song performance.
As far as programmed squences of custom sounds beyond the four available on the drawbar sets, I think I've figured a way to do that without custom displays that will die in 5-10 years, rubber contact buttons that will die in about the same time, and software that will be force updated bi-annually by hardware changes to fill microsoft's or whoever's purse. I just bought 160 pin blocks, to go on program boards, swept by analog switches, to program up to a dozen sounds in sequence like a dozen sets of drawbars, and count through them with a couple of pistons for thumbs or kick pedals, for counting up and down through the sequence. All this should also fit in the open space above the keyboard, with the program boards maybe swinging up to face the player as he programs with $.02 jumpers. Or just flick through a dozen touch switches to access programmed sounds like a dozen sets of drawbars set up already.
Running all those X77 signals out through the legs to an external power amp, and possibly back again to a reverb tank, runs of 3 to 8', was just asking for hum. I hear they got it.
The H100 is very similar to the X77 but the runs are about 3' to a 3 channel power amp, back up to the reverb switches, and down again to the power amp. That works fine. No hum.
So IMHO copy the H100 wiring. The schematics are on archive.org: the whole service manual. The precious metal plate tab switches are a great feature, it is just al that wiring that was not, IMHO. The cool thing, you can put a digital reverb effect up in the top, not all the way down past the power amp on the low keys end. With a wall transformer driven effects unit, you don't even have to run 120 VAC up in to the high gain area of the tab box. The power amp would fit up in the top, too, with IC amps.
With high performance tubes being a scarce commodity, energy costing $.42 a KWH, and everybody hating the H100 so badly for the sound of the 71 dried up electrolytic capacitors they are never going to change, I'm thinking of putting the whole power amp up on top of the keyboards of my 2nd and 3rd units, shotgun replacing everything original with modern parts. Replacing the whole electronics package after the four 12 pin AMP plugs on the back of the tab box. Also making a few of the same for sale, if all the H100 haven't gone to the landfill already. It is a marvelously expressive organ, all under tab control, no screens or levels of menus or pre-programming required of your song performance.
As far as programmed squences of custom sounds beyond the four available on the drawbar sets, I think I've figured a way to do that without custom displays that will die in 5-10 years, rubber contact buttons that will die in about the same time, and software that will be force updated bi-annually by hardware changes to fill microsoft's or whoever's purse. I just bought 160 pin blocks, to go on program boards, swept by analog switches, to program up to a dozen sounds in sequence like a dozen sets of drawbars, and count through them with a couple of pistons for thumbs or kick pedals, for counting up and down through the sequence. All this should also fit in the open space above the keyboard, with the program boards maybe swinging up to face the player as he programs with $.02 jumpers. Or just flick through a dozen touch switches to access programmed sounds like a dozen sets of drawbars set up already.
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