Hi Coyote,
I own a Hammond A-105 too.
What a wonderful jewel they are.
With regard to your reverb, I think any electronic technician might be able to help you
since the circuit and parts are extremely simple. The idea is to take the audio signal
from the out of the reverb unit (that funny part on the bottom left hand side of the
organ. I guess that that would mean to keep using your internal amplifier provided by
Hammond.
I decided to get rid of the Hammond amplifier and I connected the generator directly to my
Leslie 122. Of course I ended without reverb. Actually I do not care very much.
But an alternative way is to buy from TREK (USA) a solid state pre amplifier that could
come with reverb. It is an expensive solution (around USD$1,000.-) but you get rid of all
that hum produced by vacum tubes and old capacitators.
Good luck
Guillermo
Hi all,
I have owned two Hammonds. The first was a CV w/ HR40 tone cabinet -
the organ was from @ 1948. I gave it to a friend when he helped me
move my current Hammond, an A100. It can be seen at my website:
www.geocities.com/coyote-1/
I have done scanner rebuilds on both machines so if anyone needs help
w/ doing that let me know. I run my A100 from its G-G terminal thru a
MotionSound Pro3T, and I'm looking toput the A100 reverb signal into
the Pro3T as well. Does anyone know hot to do this?
PEACE
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