“The unit makes a great flanger, excellent chorus and a great freakout anti-music device” Imparts a vibe that a plug-in certainly can’t” good clean fun?… HELL YES!! Every studio should have at least one. “If you cannot come up with an interesting effect on this box then just get out of the business” “Deltalabs units use delta modulation istead of the usual PCM method of encoding/decoding. Lots of aliasing noise and bandwidth limitations, but it’s in no way cold or uninvolving” “I don’t know about the differences, but those old DeltaLab delays sound GREAT, at least if your idea of “great” is “warm and funky” rather than “completely accurate”. “Good sounds, it’s digital, but in an analog way! The modulation is off the hook crazy” “Great thing about effectrons is playing the knobs as your track is printing… especially for weird modulation stuff… think bauhaus’ “bela lugosi’s dead” or reverend horton heat’s “gin and tonic blues” and you’ll get it… LIQUID, baby = effectron” “OH man, I have stumbled upon this wicked awesome unit… i think this piece is amazing”
The result with the Effectron would be madder than the Lexicon – which explains why I like them so much! It’s hard to describe the difference between an Effectron and, say, a Lexicon PCM42 but, if you had both in your effects rack, you’d head off in a different direction sonically with each one. Either will do the killer flanging & phasing effects that Effectrons are famous for. The 1020 model has over a second of delay time enabling longer delays and more complex effects than the ADM 64 in another of my auctions. They have a unique sound and definite mojo! By varying the modulation depth & speed they produce effects from a slow phase, via a deep flange & warbling chorus right through to pitch-bending, gargling, modulated delays. Otherwise known as Delta-encoding, this was one of the key technologies enabling digital audioĮffectrons are quirky, entertaining devices with lots of character. In 2016, Akamai, Analog Devices, B&W and THAT Corporation are prominent Mass manufacturersįounder of Deltalab, Richie DeFreitas, holds a number of patents for “An electrical system of the type in which a digitally encoded signal is determined at least in part by the difference between a present value of an input signal and a reference signal representative of a past value of the input signal”. The more expensive devices like the Effectron I ADM 1020 had around 1 second of delay timeĭeltalab was part of the booming Massachusetts hi-tech audio industry of the 1970s and 80s which included Lexicon & Bose. RAM was super-expensive so many units had short delay times and were designed for chorus, flanging, phasing and doubling. The Effectron was part of the first wave of digital gear to hit studios in the early 1980s. Sold as seen, no returns on B Stock items B Stock: See Condition tab for more information on this item