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FOR SALE: 3/9/04
See http://members.aol.com/godcity/sale.htm for descriptions with pictures. Here's some stuff I'm selling. I'm willing to trade for high end or esoteric mics and outboard gear. Let me know what you've got. Please direct any questions to or by calling Kurt at 617-970-3808 between 11 and 11 EST. I take postal money orders and paypal, or cash if you want to come up to Salem, MA and pick something up. Lucid ADA8824 Eight channel A/D, D/A converter with spdif, AES, and Adat Lightpipe in excellent condition with only minor rack rash. Specs are at http://www.lucidaudio.com/products/p..._ADAT_info.htm. I used this along side a Digi001 to get 16 channels of I/O. Using the ADA8824 along with a SMPTE reader that generates word clock and has machine control, like a MOTU Midi Timepiece, there's also a way to cheat Digi001 into vari-speeding Protools LE to sync up with an analog tape machine. Also, with the included software, you can control the sample rate, meters, and analog input/output gain, etc from your computer. $1850 shipped. Valley Maxi-Q rack Powered 3-space rack with four parametric eq modules. They look great and sound great. Excellent for clinical eq'ing. They also have a feature called "tune" which allows you to solo individual eq bands, so you can isolate the frequencies you are working with. This feature can also be used for special filter effects. Connections are via barrier strip. $450 obo. That's $112.50 per module, folks. Add $20 for shipping. Bellari RP-583 compressor Hot-rodded with Burr-Brown op-amps and American NOS Phillips tubes. The upgrade sounds great. It's thicker and smoother than stock. A little known fact about Bellari… If you own a RP 282 compressor, you can send it in and they will upgrade it to a 583 for you. They charge $100 for the upgrade and another $100 for a faceplate that actually says RP-583. So needless to say, this 583 still says 282 on the front. Bellari also forgot to screw the top back on, so it's taped in place. $250 obo plus $20 shipping. Mesa rack-mount Dual Rectifier I bought this new in '96 or '97. It's been on some tours but still looks good. It was completely checked out, re-power tubed with Sovtek 6L6's and tuned up by a tech last week (I can provide receipts if you like). People say that rack mount Rectifiers sound better than the heads because they were made to tighter tolerances due to size constraints and since the production runs were much smaller. I don't know about that, but I own a recording studio and people bring in rectifiers all the time, so I've had a chance to hear a lot of them, and this is definitely one of the better ones. I'm going to say it's probably the second or third best one I've heard out of probably 25. Shipping is $45 flat. This is an ebay auction. http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...tem=3709964006 Everything else on this page is a straight sale. Studer A80 2" 24 track I'm selling my Studer A80 wide body 2" 24 track machine with MKII electronics and MKIII head stack. (This is the tight head stack for gapless punch ins. Punch-outs are not gapless.) I was in the midst of slowly refurbishing it when a great deal on an Otari MTR100 (Otari's answer to the Studer 820) came along, so the Studer's got to go. The makings of a great machine are here, but there are still some issues to work out. Here's the deal: Cosmetically, it's good. It's 30-ish years old, so there are a few dings and scratches, but overall it looks fine. There's about 19k hrs on it. Heads are at about 30%, which isn't too bad for Studer heads. These were just lapped (sync by EMC, repro by JRF) and mounted by Precision Motor Works. I have the JRF head report available. There's about 10 hrs on them since the lap. The motors have recently been replaced with rebuilt motors out of a ¼" machine (all A80's use the same motors). The capstan motor has recently been rebuilt and the surface bead blasted for improved grab. There is a fairly new Athan pinch roller. The tension arms have been rebuilt with MKIII components. The transport is running very nice. All of the electrolytic caps on the audio cards have been replaced, and some of the electrolytics internal to the I/O modules have been replaced. I'm including all of the electrolytic caps needed to finish the I/O modules. There is a remote, autolocator, locator stand, and all necessary cables to interface with the tape deck. X-edit editing block. Full manuals for tape machine and locator. Spares: 1 set of unmounted heads that are not in great shape, but useable. Edge tracks are bad, particularly on the sync head. 2 power supplies from a MKIII machine. A80 ¼" carcass (please, you must haul it away). A spare for almost every transport card 3 I/O modules (although 2 are play back only). A few spare record and play cards. 1 Autolocator panel. (Supposedly it has problems, but it's good for parts) 1 15/30 ips capstan for ¼". If need be, it can be extended to 2". 1 reel motor, not rebuilt. Misc. transport related parts. Misc. buttons and sheet metal parts. EPROMS for Autolocator. Tabletop boxes for locator and remote. As mentioned above, spare electrolytics needed to recap the remaining I/O modules. Known problems: The machine's transport runs nice, and it sets up and aligns well in play back. I've been mixing records from it with great success. However, when I go to record, I encounter problems on about a third of the tracks. Some tracks don't record at all, some hum, and some can't be aligned properly. I'm able to fix some of the problems by moving cards around, but not all of them. There's probably a grounding problem, some bad relays, some bad pots, and some bad record cards. I don't have a working scope or the time to track down the bad components. Also, the locator is flaky. I've rebuilt all of it except the power supply. My tech will come in and "tune the power supply" periodically and it will work fine, but after a while it starts spitting out hieroglyphics and the transport freezes. Fortunately, I can just turn off the locator and roll my chair an extra 2 feet and operate the transport from the deck. It would be nice if it worked right though, wouldn't it? One other thing, as I mentioned earlier, this thing has motors from a ¼" machine. The motors are identical to 2" machines, but the motor mounts are not. The ¼" machine these motors came from had a weirdo preview head assembly which may have contributed to the motors being mounted differently. At any rate, the motors are mounted about a ¼" further back on the machine, which means 2 things. 1.) The deck cannot be tipped up for service with 10.5" or 14" reels on the motors. I do have some smaller reels if this should ever be a problem. 2) The top plate had to be replaced with the ¼" machine's top plate. I still have the original top plate, but the holes are about ¼" off center. The current top plate, being from a preview head machine, is cut differently and doesn't completely cover the top. Some of the deck's innards are visible right behind the head block. No big deal. Maybe you care. I never did. Anyway, I just don't have any time to mess with it anymore, so my loss is your gain. It can be viewed and/or picked up at my studio in Salem, MA. I'm not interested in shipping it. I've got a lot of money into this thing, but I'm willing to take $2500 obo. No low ballers, please. Willing to trade for high-end mics, pre's, comps, and eq's. Sorry for writing a novel. I just know that when buying a piece of gear, it's important get as much information about it as possible. |
#2
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the bellari has been sold
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