Isn’t it great when you have so much quad & general audio gear you are surprised when you discover a long lost item cleaning a closet.
In the late 70’s a company called PAIA designed & sold kits for musicians & audio experimenter. Surprisingly they are still alive & kicking with a really interesting product line up. Yes you can even buy a Theremin from them: https://www.paia.com/
The product I bought was called a phlanger. It used recoton 1024 analog bucket brigade delay to create echo, reverb, and of course phlanging. Phlanging is that cool phasey swooshing sound so popular back then & I still think it’s pretty groovy today.
Anyway if you bought one of these the assembled kit looked like this:
However I bought 2 units & put them in my own enclosure adding several features. Each phlanger PCB had 3 level adjustable inputs. Each phlanger had independently adjustable controls or I could bridge them so the top row of knobs adjusted both in synch. I had independent output level controls on each one & panning output to 2 chs on each one. Therefore I called it QUADRAPHLANGE. My project ended up looking like this:
The internal wiring was a bit of a mess but I could do better today! You can see 4 holes drilled to the left of the PCB’s where I intended to put a circuit to drive LED level indicators on the front panel. However it worked so well with no surprises I didn’t feel the need.
You can see on the back panel I used an external power supply higher quality than the original, and the various in/out jacks.
I am not a musician but even back then I did upmixing & put my own personal touch on music I liked. For What it’s Worth & Crimson & Clover were begging to be messed with!
I had other mixing tools available, all analog, all hardware, I would manipulate as I wanted & put it on my Sony 4 ch Reel to reel tape machine. I could start with stereo or alter decoded quad records. I really had some head spinning effects. I don’t know what I would think of them today & so hard to dig out & play tapes on my Teac 4 ch tape machine. Maybe one day the fit will take me to do so. But right now, and for some years, I can do everything the QUADRAPHLANGE could much more on my PC.
In the late 70’s a company called PAIA designed & sold kits for musicians & audio experimenter. Surprisingly they are still alive & kicking with a really interesting product line up. Yes you can even buy a Theremin from them: https://www.paia.com/
The product I bought was called a phlanger. It used recoton 1024 analog bucket brigade delay to create echo, reverb, and of course phlanging. Phlanging is that cool phasey swooshing sound so popular back then & I still think it’s pretty groovy today.
Anyway if you bought one of these the assembled kit looked like this:
However I bought 2 units & put them in my own enclosure adding several features. Each phlanger PCB had 3 level adjustable inputs. Each phlanger had independently adjustable controls or I could bridge them so the top row of knobs adjusted both in synch. I had independent output level controls on each one & panning output to 2 chs on each one. Therefore I called it QUADRAPHLANGE. My project ended up looking like this:
The internal wiring was a bit of a mess but I could do better today! You can see 4 holes drilled to the left of the PCB’s where I intended to put a circuit to drive LED level indicators on the front panel. However it worked so well with no surprises I didn’t feel the need.
You can see on the back panel I used an external power supply higher quality than the original, and the various in/out jacks.
I am not a musician but even back then I did upmixing & put my own personal touch on music I liked. For What it’s Worth & Crimson & Clover were begging to be messed with!
I had other mixing tools available, all analog, all hardware, I would manipulate as I wanted & put it on my Sony 4 ch Reel to reel tape machine. I could start with stereo or alter decoded quad records. I really had some head spinning effects. I don’t know what I would think of them today & so hard to dig out & play tapes on my Teac 4 ch tape machine. Maybe one day the fit will take me to do so. But right now, and for some years, I can do everything the QUADRAPHLANGE could much more on my PC.