From hultgrenlr@mansfieldct.org Fri Feb 07 07:43:42 2003
Subject:RE: HELP -- No reverb?

Mark:

So is the output of the reverb unit hot enough (or as hot as the original
signal) to drive the Speakeasy? I know it likes lots of signal.

Lon

-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Zyla [mailto:res0isa4@verizon.net]
Sent: Thursday, February 06, 2003 11:04 PM
To: CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [CWSG] HELP -- No reverb?

Lon,

I have a couple of the lower end Lexicon reverbs-an MPX200 and an MPX500.
The 200 will cost you about $225.00 on the street. The Lexi-3 chip that is
in these models is the exact same chip used in their 10K+ stuff. Lexiconıs
reverbs are really spacious with great tails, with very useable programming
& tweaking.

I run my Electro into the MPX200, out of the 200 into my Speakeasy. Steve
Hayes told me early on when I purchased my Speakeasy that it likes to see
lots of gain. Heıs right.

This setup unfortunately, doesnıt allow me to patch the Lexicon into my
effects buses on my mixer. I sometimes used the extra stereo outs on my
JV-1080 to route sounds into the Lexicon and take advantage of its dual
parallel effects algorithms. Itıs an unfortunate tradeoff that Iım trying
to live with!

Personally, Iım glad there arenıt any reverb/delay effects on the Electro.
More DSP for electromechanical magic is what I say.

Mark

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