From jjmcs49@yahoo.com Mon Feb 07 13:51:08 2005
Subject:Re: Leslie 21 Rotor Line Out
It would be everything except for what comes out the horn and the
low bass notes. You would need to connect both the Rotary Output and
the Stationary/RB outputs to the mixer. Depending on where you have
the crossover in the upper unit set, the Rotary output would contain
all frequencies between 125Hz and 700Hz if that is the crossover
point. The Stationary/RB output would contain the freq. below 125Hz
and depending on whether the brake button is lit or not and the
Leslie button is off, either the freq. between 125Hz and 700Hz
(Brake light on) or all frequencies <16Hz to >16,000Hz (Brake light
on). For example; If I disconnect the S/RB line from the lower unit
and set the small three position switch on the upper unit to S/RB
Mute, turning the brake light off silences the organ (assuming the
Leslie "On" light is also off).
I think, for what you are trying to do, you would need to mic the
horn (with the switch set to mute) and connect it and both the
Rotary output and the S/RB output to the mixer and then try to
balance the three (and the balance will change every time you move a
drawbar). You could just mic the upper unit with the switch set to
normal, but you wouldn't get the really deep bass that the XK-3 is
capable of. It might be easier to just run the XK-3's left 1/4" out
to the mixer and connect the two upper unit outs to an amp. My ears
aren't what they used to be, but except for the wind noise coming
from the upper unit, if you spun me around so I didn't know which
way I was facing between my L21 and my amps with the Digital Leslie,
I couldn't tell which is which.
--- In CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com, M T wrote:
> I appreciate your reply but I am still not clear. I