SkinnyJohnny said:So maybe we'll should be looking forward to the "Rickard" Sta-Level!
Remember the "Level Devil"?
SkinnyJohnny said:Rickard, please let us know how it turns out if you decide to build your own.
SkinnyJohnny said:I thought this was really funny. The other day I saw a post on Ebay for a homemade Urei 1176. The guy said he didn't know if it worked because someone in his family wouldn't let him plug something he made into the wall outlet. He said he's sure it works and if not to contact some DIY website and they could help. I believe he has about a $650 buy it now price on it.
dtube1 said:... and the holy grail of broadcast-grade vari-mu's, a Federal AM-864U. I remember at the time looking at the junk pile and thinking "someday, I bet those are going to be worth something..." ???
Play Freebird said:Is there anyone here who actually liked the sound of the stock AM-864/U?
Flundran said:Hello all,
I just wanted to follow up this thread wich I started last fall. I began to build my own Sta-level, with Lundahl in/out transformers and an original 6386 RCA tube. I finished it about 3 weeks ago, and it turned out great!
/Flundran
Play Freebird said:Flundran said:Hello all,
I just wanted to follow up this thread wich I started last fall. I began to build my own Sta-level, with Lundahl in/out transformers and an original 6386 RCA tube. I finished it about 3 weeks ago, and it turned out great!
/Flundran
Nice work! I'm sure it sounds good with those Lundahl transformers.
Would you be interested in a close-up photo of the gain reduction meter on my late-vintage Sta-Level? This might assist you in making a replica to put in place of the Triplett meter face.
My first AM on-air experience involved a tube type Gates Yard, an SA-39 & a tube type Gates AM transmitter in 1972. WOW....it was so clean & smooth sounding. Sounded better (on the air monitor) than the FM's of the day.dtube1 said:Play Freebird said:Is there anyone here who actually liked the sound of the stock AM-864/U?
My guess is that precious few, if any, broadcast guys liked those beasts. But, the current market for those - as well as Sta-Levels, LA-2, LA-3, 1176, Volumax, etc. - is in the recording community. The fact of the matter is, those old limiters sound incredible on certain sources. I recently sold a couple, dead, Gates SA-39's for $1k. The buyer runs a recording studio and has a real fondness for old broadcast processors.
FWIW, if anyone has a Urei or JBL-branded compressor/limiter (LA-2, LA-3, LA-4, etc), I'd be interested. Current condition doesn't matter. I love optical compressors and I enjoy restoring them.
-D