Gee shawn, you have the best excuse in the world to take drugs! I once was in a band with a lead player with a bad
back, and every once in a while he would drink while on his pain killers - That did not last long. He was great when
sober, though. I will take Lil Bass to work and weigh it on the postage scale there. My bathroom scale is way off,
which is a plus in my book. i will let you know her real weight, so you can consider it when your wife strikes it rich.
Maybe you can afford a Moody strap then, too!
Paul, I am sorry I totally passed over your asking about the rig in the pictures. Here:
The top rack is input. The signal path starts with the fourth unit from the top. It is an old real time analyzer that I
added the gutz of an RS-5 to, so it would analyze the input signal and work as the RS-5 normally would. I clipped
the tap to the analyzer when I thought it was introducing a dirty signal to the output. The RS-5R sitting on top of the
CD player in the larger pictures will replace this shortly, and the gutz will be put back in their little blue box for when
I want a more portable power supply.
The output is mono, here, and goes to the Eden Navigator. I have the EQ set flat, as I was testing the speakers
recently. The CD player is hooked to its stereo Aux inputs. The Peterson strobe tuner (top unit) is connected to the
tuner out of the Eden Navigator. Therefore, I can mute the Navigator and use the Peterson silently. The third unit
down is a MidiVerb 4 that I sometimes use for reverb, flange, and echo. It is connect to the Navigator via the effects
loops ins and outs.
The bottom rack is output. The top unit is a 20 amp Furman conditioner. The stereo output from the Navigator goes
into a graphic equalizer that I use to cut things out of the sound, mainly. I use the parametric EQ system on the
Navigator to add with. The signal then goes to the stereo three-way electronic crossover. This one is a Rane. They
are very dependable and easy to use. This is a tri-amped configuration, so there are three power amps to run the 21's,
the 10's, and the horns sitting on top. I ended up turning the horns off, as crossed over at 6,000 Hz, nothing was
coming out of them, except sounds that I would want to cut out anyway. I do turn the horns on, if I play a CD. Hey,
this is actually a really nice stereo. My only problem with the Navigator is that its input is strictly mono. So it's a
really nice mono-stereo. I have seriously considered dumping it for a F2-B and a SF-2. Not this year.
(Message edited by poor_nigel on October 16, 2004)