Members bruto Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 It looks pretty old, and it goes on sale Friday at a yard sale. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members piano39 Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 Hammond S6 Chord Organ. Did not use tone wheels. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members bruto Posted October 18, 2012 Author Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 Originally Posted by piano39 Hammond S6 Chord Organ.Did not use tone wheels. Thank You! No tone wheels means that I'm not camping on their lawn Thursday night. I thought that it might have been a Novachord or something similar. Again, thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members ElectricPuppy Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 This is a Hammond Novachord. 'Tis only one kind. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members bruto Posted October 18, 2012 Author Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 Here's the link if anyone's interested: http://cosprings.craigslist.org/gms/3344211880.html Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members ElectricPuppy Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 You need to buy that thing just for the big, honkin' switches. Those are awesome! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members ElectricPuppy Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 Some demos on the 'Tubes make it sound pretty much like a combo organ. Meh. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members pogo97 Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 "Northern Hammond" (made in Canada) "to a good home" sitting on kijiji these days. I'm pretty sure it has tonewheels but no Leslie and likely no output Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Plink Floyd Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 Hammond model M. Pros: tonewheels, scanner vibrato/chorus, waterfall keys, sounds great through a Leslie, lots of pure Hammond mojo. Cons: no harmonic percussion, no presets, vibrato is non-selective (on or off for both manuals at once, not split), sounds meh without a Leslie, 250 lbs, at least 60 years old, so probably gonna need a cap or two... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members mate_stubb Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 You can find M-3s (same as M but with percussion) here in the midwest for $50-$100. It's pretty much the only spinet worth buying IMO. A model M would be worth taking if it was free(ish) and working. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Plink Floyd Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 The Novachord lacked tonewheels, but I would almost certainly camp on a lawn for one. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members wesg Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 The chord organ is a very very distant descent of the Novachord, if it makes you feel any better. That Northern Hammond model M -- I offered to take it away for them a number of month ago, but they want money for it. I would gig it if I could get it working right -- I'm not using percussion at all on my L100 in my current band. Just not my style, unless playing something like AWSOP or Child In Time. piano39, how do you differentiate the S6 from the earlier models? Here is a Hammond Chord Organ played by a pro, side-by-side with a B3:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nE6ay6u96n4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members delaware dave Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 Originally Posted by bruto It looks pretty old, and it goes on sale Friday at a yard sale. How timely is this post? My bass player has one and I just did some research on it yesterday for him! It's an S-6 and there was one on EBAY yesterday for $125 with a BIN of $159. Probably worth under $100. I played it Saturday night. Doesn't have the B3 sound at all. Actually sounded horrible. I'd pass on it.From the theatre organs site: S6 Chord OrganSynopsis: Autochording organ. Manuals: One 37 note manual. Features: Three sections: Solo unit, Chord unit and Bass unit with seperate volume controls. Solo unit is monophonic and driven from the keyboard, taking the highest key pressed, the chord unit is driven from tabs which has one oscillatoe for each group of two or three keys, preferring the lowest one, and two pedals to play the bass notes; one for the tonic and the other the fifth of the current chord. Very difficult to keep in tune. Two internal speakers. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members mcmike100 Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 There's an S6 in great shape going for $50 here on Craigslist. I've thought about it. I have a Leslie preamp, so I could run it through the Leslie for grins. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Fluke Posted October 18, 2012 Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 Originally Posted by delaware dave and two pedals to play the bass notes; one for the tonic and the other the fifth of the current chord. Wow, that's a pretty unique feature. I've seen one of those IRL, unplugged, probably didn't work, and didn't even think about the pedals. Are there any other organs with this type of bass pedals? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members bruto Posted October 18, 2012 Author Members Share Posted October 18, 2012 Originally Posted by wesg The chord organ is a very very distant descent of the Novachord, if it makes you feel any better. Yea you're right. I found the schematics: http://users.rcn.com/clonk/ChordOrga...ics/index.htmlIt has 16 individual note + 6 chord oscillator tone circuits followed by frequency divider networks. It has somewhere between 300 and 400 hundred capacitors all prone to leakage after 55+ years. There are 29 vacuum tubes, mostly 12AU7s, six 12BH7s, and two 6V6s in the power amp section. Very interesting design with the tube oscillators and frequency dividers. I could envision a few mods, namely filters and controllable envelope generators, that would put this closer to the Novachord. Then again, as the tone generators are designed to sound like they do, I don't think it would change much. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members TheB3Nut Posted November 4, 2012 Members Share Posted November 4, 2012 Originally Posted by mate_stubb You can find M-3s (same as M but with percussion) here in the midwest for $50-$100. It's pretty much the only spinet worth buying IMO.A model M would be worth taking if it was free(ish) and working. I like the M-100 series quite a bit, too. Downside is diving board keys, but the vibrato celeste can add interesting flavors and the twin 12's and separate 8" reverb speaker give it a fuller sound if you have to play the thing without a Leslie. Fixing up a '65-ish redcap M-111 as we speak...particularly-good sounding specimen, this one. Threw it into full-on old-lady-with-blue-hair mode (full normal vibrato, both reverb tabs down, mostly white drawbars emphasized) and tore into Lawrence of Arabia...fun! :-D She'll make someone a dandy first Hammond.TP Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Outkaster Posted November 6, 2012 Members Share Posted November 6, 2012 It should be a free organ if anything. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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