Thank you, Jesper.
The bastard is still here in my shop waiting to be repaired. I think the owner will be proud to have one of the first SDS3s. The truth is, that this machine is so old and worn out, that you ruin the PCBs even with the lowest soldering temperature, because the copper doesn't stick right on the board anymore. The tin is very grey and not shiny. And, without the mods, you have the noise bleed-through on tone settings, the LFO bleed through and more. But I keep this one to the original state as a collectors item, because its owner has another 2 SDS3s.
Michael
----- Original Message -----
From: jesper
To: Simmons_Drums@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, March 11, 2010 8:08 AM
Subject: [Simmons Drums] SDS-3 decay kill socket [update]
I remember seeing a picture with two SDS-3's. Can't find the message in
the archives so maybe I received it offlist. But I thought the answer
was good to get into the archives, so here we go...
A pic was posted with two different back panels displayed and one of the
synths missed the decay kill socket. Today I stumbled upon the
explanation in one of my manuals (yes, I bought mine with two user
manuals) and at the very beginning there's a stapled addendum which
brings clarity to the question. It reads:
---
IMPORTANT
AMENDMENT TO SIMMONS DRUM SYNTHESIZER III OWNERS MANUAL
1. Decay Kill - Effective from Serial No. 0021 Upwards.
A footswitch can be used to cut long decays - enabling the
synthesizer to be used like a Hi-Hat pedal i.e. pedal switch up - long
decay, pedal switch down - short decay.
2. Box Dimensions - Effective from Serial No. 0021 Upwards.
The height of the synthesizer console is increased to 145 cm
including rubber feet)
---
So, whomever it was with that missing decay socket. It _is_ an early
bastard! :D
Please note the use of "Z" in the quote above. Dave was very modern,
already back in UK '79. ;)
--
electronically yours, jesper
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