From hammond.b3@verizon.net Sun Jul 15 12:46:56 2012
Subject:Re: Mojo C/V effect
There's still a missing piece to all of this. If the Mojo contains the same engine that is in the VB3 then I'd have serious doubts about it. My main concern is the C/V that is in the VST VB3.
I am interested in the Mojo base don clips I've heard but one can't really hear all of the effects that way.
No one has answered or been able to answer that question. If the the Mojo has the exact C/V that is in the VST version then it's not going to be a piece that works for me. The next question is whether it has more options for editing than the VST VB3.
I've actually had band members cringe when they heard it.
Since I tried to run it with Main Stage I thoroughly checked to see if something else was going on to color the effect. I tried it with the Leslie effect stopped and it was still not working correctly.
I'm not sure what can go wrong with a VST plug-in. Maybe I got a bad piece of software. Doesn't seem like that would happen.
Seems as though no one knows the answer to this.
I never liked the C/V in the VST VB3 and any attempt to edit it didn't make any difference in the basic configuration. It's eithe too light or too heavy but the effect remains the same.
It is more like the C/V I had in an old A100. When I first heard it I swore it had dendrites or some issue that made it motorboat.
I spent hours on it taking it apart and finally got a tech from Nashville who walked me through a repair.
In the end, we determined that the chorus part of this particle organ just sounded that way.
some folks like that wobbly chorus. I don't care for it and that's the way it is.
A console chorus is a product of two effects.
In the A100, the vibrato portion of the chorus is more pronounced whereas in most B's and C's I've played the vibrato portion is less pronounced. It's a sound one really has to get used to. To me it's not a pleasant sounding effect.
Chuck