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lightbg

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Posts posted by lightbg

  1. 4 old guys having a ball!

    Sometimes I just step into $hit with both feet - I've never worked with better musicians in my life - and they managed to make even me sound good. Jim DeAngelis on guitar, Tony Signa on flute, the legendary Don Williams on drums, and me and Lefty on a cover of Charlie Earland's "More Today Than Yesterday". This was recorded at Paul's Bar and Bowling (yes, 4 lanes upstairs and 4 more downstairs in the back) in Paterson, NJ, this past Saturday (October 3rd, 2015).

     

    [video:youtube]

     

  2. I'm totally impressed Jake. I've never seen anyone play bass and keyboard at the same time. Great sound too!

    Jake wins!

     

    Thanks guys! Way back in the Dark Ages (before keyboards that split) I saw a guy do this, and I said "Beats carrying around a Hammond and Leslie on club dates". So, even though the new Electro 5 will split, I don't really need it :)

     

    Jake

  3. About 6 pages back I uploaded a still of my neighborhood shot from my quadcopter in daylight hours. I decided to see what a nighttime shot would look like, and this is the result:

     

    http://pic20.picturetrail.com/VOL96/792815/1412465/410531548.jpg

     

    It's actually facing away from Casio headquarters simply because nobody in that direction had any Christmas lights out.......yet. I'll try again soon.

     

    Once again, no photographic talent, just combining one hobby with another to get a different perspective.

     

    Jake

  4. A lone outhouse in the ghost town of Gold Point in Nevada. The inside is aglow. Could this be a ghost smoking a pipe while taking care of some business?

     

    Title: The Outhouse At The Edge of the World (3493)

    Photo: Ken Lee Photography

    Info: Nikon D610, AF-S Nikkor 14-24mm f/2.8G ED lens at 14mm, 260 seconds, f/8, ISO 200. 2014-07-14 00:33. I used an LED flashlight for light painting.

    Location: Gold Point, NV, USA

     

    3493-2014-07-14-0033-260sf8iso200-outhouse-kenlee_goldpoint-1000px.jpg

     

    Brings new meaning to bowling a 111.......(sorry if that's a bit obscure, but I'm hoping someone will understand).

     

    Amazing photo.

     

    Jake

  5. I am NOT a photographer by any means ( can't draw a straight line with a ruler and pencil......fortunately, my wife and oldest son are art teachers, but I digress..... I am awestruck by the efforts of those that have contributed to this thread, so I felt obligated to add a pic in honor of the thread starter, Mike Martin. Last week was my 1st birthday that my kids actually gave me what I wanted: a GoPro Hero 3+ Black Edition. Since I fly R/C helis, I had to stick it under my Blade 350QX2 quadcopter and see what I could of my neighborhood. This is a still I extracted from the vid:

     

    http://pic20.picturetrail.com/VOL96/792815/1412465/410091079.jpg

     

    The cluster of buildings in the upper LH corner is Rockaway Townsquare Mall, and Casio's HQ is just SouthWest of the perimeter road. I might not be exactly 100% on the mark, but I'm thisclose....... :roll:

     

    Great thread, Mike, and anytime you want an overhead shot let me know.

     

    Jake

  6. I thought I was in search mode when I opened up the site and saw this post on the first page. Sean, I'm glad your RVS is giving you good service. Traynor over engineered their amps and I never thought I'd still be using mine this long. I'm also glad my pack rat background made me keep the paperwork for the amp... it's almost like a history book compared to the non existent manuals of today.

     

    We should now put this thread to bed.

     

    Jake

  7. Sean,

     

    Congratulations! I used to nickname the head "Mercury" because of the weight, which you've already found is considerable. If/When your tech does pull it apart make sure he vacuums the inside: 30+ years of flow thru ventilation without a filter can trap some pretty interesting things inside (mostly dog hair in my case). The sound is solid - Yorkville really did a great job engineering this amp. You'll get lots of use out of it, I'm sure.

     

    Now to see if I can locate my manual..........

     

    Jake

  8. Glad to help, but I can't offer much because I basically didn't use them.

     

    Mono/Stereo: I didn't ever use this because I never bought the 2nd cabinet. IIRC engaging this switch with 2 speakers (the max; the back panel is a power toggle, fuse holder, and 2 - 1/4" jacks)allowed you to split your signal and the RVS channel pot became a L/R pot....not true stereo, but helpful if you had a second cabinet located some distance away.

     

    Reverb - Built in spring system. Decent and natural sounding. The reverb channel pot became an amount pot when using the effects send/return subsystem.

     

    Noise gate - Basically a non-adjustable on/off if you had a system buzz or hum inline - helped a lot with my Clavinet.

     

    I believe I have the owner's manual someplace in my house (I moved here in October, and coming from a 2 family 2 story full basement full attic house to a bi-level with a small crawlspace and no basement has been a challenge to locate many things). If you score it I'll photocopy it and send it assuming I do get my hands on it.

     

    Jake

  9. Wolvesparade,

     

    I've had this rig for 33 years, and it still serves as my main studio amp. I bought it new in 1979 at Long and McQuade's only USA store in Parsippany, NJ. It's a beast to move(head is 85lbs, cabinet is 60 lbs), but it still cranks tons of clean power. Sure, the pots are scratchy and the cooling fan gets noisy, but if you can score it for a buck fifty you're stealing it ;)

     

    Some pics:

     

    Entire Rig

    http://pic20.picturetrail.com/VOL96/792815/4063775/403259376.jpg

     

    RVS II head

    http://pic20.picturetrail.com/VOL96/792815/4063775/403259377.jpg

     

    The Rotating Vibrato Synthesis was really ahead of it's time for the late 70's. You could control fast, slow, and ramp speeds, but not upper and lower. It does pale compared to current sims, but it never sounded "chirpy". I ran a Univox Organizer through it and later on my Korg CX3.

     

    http://pic20.picturetrail.com/VOL96/792815/4063775/403259378.jpg

     

    Your channel controls

    http://pic20.picturetrail.com/VOL96/792815/4063775/403259382.jpg

     

    Finally, your inputs (5 channels)

     

    http://pic20.picturetrail.com/VOL96/792815/4063775/403259379.jpg

     

    The head is packed with an aluminum heatsink the size of Delaware, which explains the weight. There are a pair of intake screens underneath the head, and the fan exhausts out either side. Do Not Block These! There were some large (maybe 2") rubber feet adhered to the chassis bolts on the bottom of the head, but these disappeared long ago, and I never found replacements. If you look at the full rig picture you can see that there are raised moldings around the edges. I've been careful to sit the head on these and the gap is large enough to allow enough air to enter the intakes. The fan is a replacement from the original, but it started rattling almost as soon as I installed it. It works, but the noise will let you know it's switched on. The only other item I've replaced is the master level slider, otherwise it's been trouble free for over half my lifetime.

     

    This rig is also the reason I bought my Yorkville Blok 100 keyboard amp. That's been bulletproof since 1989, and is my main gig amp.

     

    Hope this helps.

     

    Jake

     

     

     

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