Hey dstuhne! VERY NICE playing!! Really sounds like Jon Lord - I love the part when you play Highway Star and when you bang the organ, hold that G chord down and then reduce the overdrive... :-) (can you remember the chord?? sounds like G dim)
One question: How do you control the overdrive without changing the volume of the organ? Do you have two extra pedals or how does it work with the MIG?
Chord? It was a moment of inspiration. :)) If I hear and remember right it is not G DIM. This is the chord that has more triller efect (#C, E, G, #A). The same chord that is used in Bach's Toccata. This solo (whole song) is very similar to Bach's music. At least to me. :)
When MIG is installed Leslie's Master Volume Control is used for adjusting the overdrive and Bass/Treble Gain Volume Controls are used to adjust the volume of Leslie speaker.
@dstuhne Hey, thank you very much for your help! I really like that chord, because it screams out of the Leslie like hell!
The fact is that I'm about to get a M100, and if I can afford, I would also like to have a Leslie 760. And then I would use the MIG, too. So did I get it right? You adjust the volume of the leslie with the Treble/Bass controls and the overdrive by the pedal of the P100? But if I turn the volume down on the P100, the Leslie would become softer too?!
No, you didn't get it right 100%. Yes you control the amount of overdrive with the volume pedal (when you are playing). But how hard would you overdrive sound when pedal on Hammond is pressed all the way down it depends on how did you set the MASTER VOLUME on your Leslie.
The organ is a p100 like yours. From that i go directly into a modified Leslie 760 (I replaced the Solid State amp with a Reussenzehn Organ Tube Amp).
It's a logical thing: Normally the pedal is wired BEFORE the reverb stage. So it changes the volume you feed into the reverb stage.
Now when I have the pedal after the line out, which means BEHIND the reverb and I play a short loud note and then immediately turn the pedal back, then it cuts the reverb as it is part of the line output.
Hello, I recently got a p100 too. The problem is that the expression pedal is missing. Can you give me some hints where to get one or how to replace it? Does it have to be one with a potentiometer in it or is it opto-electric?
You have two solutions... Or to get original or replacement pedal with opto-electric or potentiometer (it is the same). Or you can use 1/4" jack output from Hammond then through normal cheap volume pedal (for example Proel, Roland etc.) and then to a Leslie preamp or whatever do you use for amplification. Your find pedals on ebay. Hope that this helps. ;)
Hey, thanks for your quick answer. I tried using a volume pedal between the organ output and the leslie. That doesn't sound good as it doesn't change the preamp reponse and also cuts the reverb when you quickly change from loud to soft.
I have an ernie ball volume pedal and tried wiring the three cables that come out of the organs foot pedal case to its potentiometer. It has no effect to the volume. Just that it hums when the pedal is all the way back... So what do I do wrong?
I really don't know how your volume pedal can cut reverb... it doesn't have anything with reverb, it's nothing else then potentiometer for changing signal level. Really interesting. First, tell me exactly what kind of equipment (which organ, which preamp, which Leslie etc.) do you have?
You can't just connect any pedal to Hammond outputs! You have to have right resistance in your potentiometer! Be careful with that because you can damage your equipment!
the p-100 is basically the same as the l-100 isn't it? if that's the case you could get more volume by replacing the expression pedal between amp and preamp with an rca cable(the light sensor in the pedal can get dirty over the years, and cut volume), and with a screwdriver you can adjust the trim of the "l100" amp.
Gdim=C#dim depends on what the bass tone is....
But hey man, great sound...I'd love to get that leslie modification! Too bad they are no longer in production, so I hear.
Can I buy your 760? ;-)
Greetings from Holland
rpmusic100 1 year ago
@rpmusic100
Hey! Thanks for you comment but IHMO Gdim ist'n the same as C#dim because C#dim = C#+E+G and Gdim=G+Bb+Db.
Who said that Leslie's are no more in production? :S
dstuhne 1 year ago
creamy
menga111 1 year ago
Hey dstuhne! VERY NICE playing!! Really sounds like Jon Lord - I love the part when you play Highway Star and when you bang the organ, hold that G chord down and then reduce the overdrive... :-) (can you remember the chord?? sounds like G dim)
One question: How do you control the overdrive without changing the volume of the organ? Do you have two extra pedals or how does it work with the MIG?
Greetings from Germany
Martin
MPCapricorn 1 year ago
@MPCapricorn: Hey! Thanks for nice comment.
Chord? It was a moment of inspiration. :)) If I hear and remember right it is not G DIM. This is the chord that has more triller efect (#C, E, G, #A). The same chord that is used in Bach's Toccata. This solo (whole song) is very similar to Bach's music. At least to me. :)
When MIG is installed Leslie's Master Volume Control is used for adjusting the overdrive and Bass/Treble Gain Volume Controls are used to adjust the volume of Leslie speaker.
dstuhne 1 year ago
Comment removed
MPCapricorn 1 year ago
@dstuhne
@dstuhne Hey, thank you very much for your help! I really like that chord, because it screams out of the Leslie like hell!
The fact is that I'm about to get a M100, and if I can afford, I would also like to have a Leslie 760. And then I would use the MIG, too. So did I get it right? You adjust the volume of the leslie with the Treble/Bass controls and the overdrive by the pedal of the P100? But if I turn the volume down on the P100, the Leslie would become softer too?!
MPCapricorn 1 year ago
@MPCapricorn
Yes,it really screams like hell.:)
No, you didn't get it right 100%. Yes you control the amount of overdrive with the volume pedal (when you are playing). But how hard would you overdrive sound when pedal on Hammond is pressed all the way down it depends on how did you set the MASTER VOLUME on your Leslie.
dstuhne 1 year ago
Yes... just a small part of "Here I go again". ;)
dstuhne 2 years ago
1:53 is awesome! :) :)
maurich 2 years ago
And you don't have Leslie preamp? Directly from Hammond to the Leslie with 9 pin cable?
dstuhne 2 years ago
I forgot the equipement:
The organ is a p100 like yours. From that i go directly into a modified Leslie 760 (I replaced the Solid State amp with a Reussenzehn Organ Tube Amp).
The volume pedal is a standard Ernie Ball pedal.
mariusleicht 2 years ago
It's a logical thing: Normally the pedal is wired BEFORE the reverb stage. So it changes the volume you feed into the reverb stage.
Now when I have the pedal after the line out, which means BEHIND the reverb and I play a short loud note and then immediately turn the pedal back, then it cuts the reverb as it is part of the line output.
mariusleicht 2 years ago
Interesting... I'm sure that my P100 had line out after the reverb. That's why it was so strange to me. Now I see what's your problem. :)
dstuhne 2 years ago
Hello, I recently got a p100 too. The problem is that the expression pedal is missing. Can you give me some hints where to get one or how to replace it? Does it have to be one with a potentiometer in it or is it opto-electric?
thx,marius
mariusleicht 2 years ago
You have two solutions... Or to get original or replacement pedal with opto-electric or potentiometer (it is the same). Or you can use 1/4" jack output from Hammond then through normal cheap volume pedal (for example Proel, Roland etc.) and then to a Leslie preamp or whatever do you use for amplification. Your find pedals on ebay. Hope that this helps. ;)
dstuhne 2 years ago
Hey, thanks for your quick answer. I tried using a volume pedal between the organ output and the leslie. That doesn't sound good as it doesn't change the preamp reponse and also cuts the reverb when you quickly change from loud to soft.
I have an ernie ball volume pedal and tried wiring the three cables that come out of the organs foot pedal case to its potentiometer. It has no effect to the volume. Just that it hums when the pedal is all the way back... So what do I do wrong?
mariusleicht 2 years ago
I really don't know how your volume pedal can cut reverb... it doesn't have anything with reverb, it's nothing else then potentiometer for changing signal level. Really interesting. First, tell me exactly what kind of equipment (which organ, which preamp, which Leslie etc.) do you have?
You can't just connect any pedal to Hammond outputs! You have to have right resistance in your potentiometer! Be careful with that because you can damage your equipment!
dstuhne 2 years ago
cool stuff!!
CH11GER 2 years ago
Thanks CH11GER!
dstuhne 2 years ago
To se traži!!! Di si naša mig lampe?
Me5htar 2 years ago
ebay
dstuhne 2 years ago
Thanks dclacomb. ;)
dstuhne 2 years ago
Shit, that thing screams! Nice Jon Lord :)
dclacomb 2 years ago
the p-100 is basically the same as the l-100 isn't it? if that's the case you could get more volume by replacing the expression pedal between amp and preamp with an rca cable(the light sensor in the pedal can get dirty over the years, and cut volume), and with a screwdriver you can adjust the trim of the "l100" amp.
Shwaggetyshfifty 3 years ago
Yes, P100 is the same as L100. Thanks, but I've cleaned my light sensor and it works perfect. ;)
dstuhne 3 years ago
DAaaaa! od kojeg to? izgleda poprilicno profi!
weddspock 3 years ago
Sta malo ne pokazes facu da svi vide kako si zgodan!
weddspock 3 years ago
Ovo budem shvatio kao provokaciju... Sram te moze biti! :P
dstuhne 3 years ago
btw., tu igracku sam od tvojeg suseda kupil.. :D ;))
dstuhne 3 years ago
Jebeeeen! :)
maurich 3 years ago
Great sound, man!
turntapzap 3 years ago
Thanks turntapzap! ;)
dstuhne 3 years ago