nevadalogoboss
  • Home

Hammond Manual Pdf

25.08.2019by admin

11-Pin Leslie Stereo “Y” Adapter; 11-Pin Leslie “Y” Adapter; 1122 Leslie Connector Adapter (11 pin organs to 122A Leslie) 1147 Leslie Connector Adapter (11 pin organs to 147A Leslie). Service manual for repair of Hammond Organ models, covering most console organs. Skip to main content. Search the history of over 373 billion web pages on the Internet. PDF WITH TEXT download. Download 1 file. SINGLE PAGE PROCESSED JP2 ZIP download. Download 1 file.

  1. Hammond Manual 1857
Aeolian Hammond BA player organ with Hammond tone cabinet (1938)

The Hammond organ is an electric organ, invented by Laurens Hammond and John M. Hanert[1] and first manufactured in 1935.[2] Various models were produced, which originally used tonewheels to generate sound via additive synthesis, where component waveform ratios are mixed by sliding switches called drawbars and imitate the pipe organ's registers. Around 2 million Hammond organs have been manufactured, and it has been described as one of the most successful organs ever.[3] The organ is commonly used with, and associated with, the Leslie Speaker.

Tonewheel organs[edit]

Tonewheel organs generate sound by mechanical toothed wheels, that rotate in front of electromagnetic pickups. Each tonewheel assembly creates tones with low harmonic content, close to a sine wave. Inside the coil is a permanent magnet. As the teeth of the tonewheel pass by, the strength of the magnetism changes—when the tip of a tooth is closest to the tip of the magnet, the magnetism is strongest. As the magnetism varies, that induces an alternating current (AC) in the coil, which becomes one of the frequencies used in harmonic synthesis.[4]

ImageModel Name / NumberYears producedDescription
A1935–1938[5]The first Hammond in production. Two 61-note manuals, 25-note pedalboard, 2 x 9 drawbars per manual, 2 pedal drawbars, 9 presets per manual, a tremolo effect generator ('tremulant').[5]
A-1001959–1965[6]A B-3 / C-3's internals in an integrated package with power amp and speakers[7]
B-A1938[8]Model B-C style organ with built-in player organ mechanism[9] (possibly Duo-Art), custom built by Aeolian-Skinner.[10]
B-C1936–1942[11]The first organ produced in the deeper Model B cabinet, to accommodate the chorus generator[11]
B-21949–1954[12]Model B style cabinet with variable vibrato (V1, V2, V3, C1, C2, C3)
B-31954–1974[13]The best known Hammond. Similar to the B-2, but with the added harmonic percussion circuit. Made famous by Jimmy Smith who influenced numerous other players.[14]
C-21949–1954[12]Model C style cabinet with variable vibrato (V1, V2, V3, C1, C2, C3)
C-31954–1974[13]The second best known Hammond. Similar to the C-2, but with the added harmonic percussion circuit
D1939–1942[8]A model C organ with factory supplied chorus generator
D-1001963–1969[15]Internals of an RT-3 with built-in amp and speakers
E1937–1949[16]The first attempt at a full size American Guild of Organists (AGO) 32-note pedalboard. Also included four toe pistons
E-1001965–1970[17]A cut-down version of the A-100
E-2001965–1971[18]A version of the E-100 specifically designed for churches
E-3001965–1969[19]A version of the E-100 with additional 'harp sustain' feature
G-1001964–1967[20]Non-drawbar tonewheel organ. Included 65 stop tablets, 12 couplers, 18 thumb pistons, 8 toe pistons. Also known as the Grand-100
H-1001965–1969[21]Tonewheel organ with additional features. Not generally considered to be particularly popular.[22]
H-2001969–1975[23]Version of the H-100 designed for churches and theatres
HX-1001970-1975[citation needed]Version of the H100 in a pseudo X66 case for stage work. Supplied with D10 speaker.[citation needed]
L-100 series1961–1968[16]First Hammond to retail for under £1,000. Much abused by Keith Emerson.[24]
  • L-122A has extra percussion voices.[citation needed]
  • L-222 came with an integrated keyboard cover or fall.[citation needed]
Porta B
series
1971–1974[25](1970[26])Portable version of L-100 series for professional use.[26] There were several versions on each country, built by different factories:[27]
  • L-100NS / L-PNS-100 – USA version (LP-100 ?)
  • L-100-PN / L-100PNS – Belgian version, also sold in Netherlands. S means a version with pedal sustain.
  • P-100 / L-100-P – converted L-102, sold in Germany and Denmark.
  • P-100-S – a version with pedal sustain (1972–1974)
  • P-100-H
M1948–51[12][28]First spinet organ. 2x44 key manuals, 12 note pedalboard.
M-21951–1955[12][28]An M with selectable vibrato
M-31955–1964[12][28]An M-2 with B-3 / C-3 style harmonic percussion
M-1001961–1968[29]Tonewheel spinet organ, replacing the M series. Includes presets.
R-1001970–1975[30]E-100 style organ with transistor / solid-state power amp and built-in Leslie
RT1949Replacement for the Model E. Tonewheel organ similar to DV but with 32 note AGO pedalboard
RT-21949–1954[6]Like a C-2, but with a full 32 note AGO pedalboard
RT-31954–1969[6]Like a C-3, but with a full 32 note AGO pedalboard
T-100 series1968–1975[31]A tonewheel spinet with a transistor / solid-state power amplifier
  • T-200: T-100 with built in leslie and extra percussion.[citation needed]
  • T-400: as T-200 but with Drum machine.[citation needed]
  • T-500: as T-400 but revised case.Last tonewheel built.[citation needed]
  • XTP: Futuristic T-500 with pull out speakers leaving organ on pedestal.[citation needed]
X-661967–1973[32]12-tone tonewheel generator with frequency divider and various additional features
X-771968–1973[33]A restyled H-100, designed to replace the B-3. Had its own Leslie cabinet, the X-77L

Two models in Church-styled cabinet were made under military specifications, and named G (G for 'Government contract', withchorus), and G-2 (with vibrato), to be installed in chapels and officer's messes of U.S. Army and Navy.

Vacuum tube musical instruments[edit]

Hammond Manual 1857

Vacuum tube musical instruments mean electronic musical instruments generating sound with vacuum tube-based electronic oscillators. Hammond Organ Company commercialized it in the late-1930s as Novachord (1939–1942) and Solovox (1940–1948). Especially, new designs introduced on Novachord — subtractive synthesis and frequency divider — were immediately followed by many manufacturers of electronic organs and polyphonic synthesizers during the 1940s-1970s. However, Hammond Organ Company did not adopt these on main products until the late-1960s, except for S series chord organ (1950–1966) and 'Solo Pedal Unit' on RT series and D-100 (1949–1969).

ImageModel Name / NumberYears producedDescription
Novachord (model H)1939–1942[34]First commercial polyphonicsynthesizer. Although Novachord itself is not referred to as an electronic organ, its basic design became mainstream, being implemented in electronic organs and polyphonic synthesizers during 1940s-1970s.
Solovox
(model J,K,L)
1940–1950[35]

Monophonic attachment keyboard instrument, intended to accompany the pianos with lead voice of organ and orchestral sound. It consists of two units — a 3-octave mini keyboard attaching under the piano keyboard, and a tone cabinet including electronic sound generator, amplifier and loudspeaker.[36] The sound generator is based on a vacuum tube oscillator and octave divider circuits originally designed for Novachord. There are three minor changed models:[35]

  • Model J (1940–1946)
  • Model K (1946–1948)
  • Model L (1948–1950)
Solo Pedal Unit
on RT series and D-100
1949–1969[6]

Solo Pedal Unit (or Pedal Solo Unit) provides a monophonic bright bass sound on RT series and model D-100 consoles, layered with tradiotional polyphonic tonewheel pedal sound. Although Solo Pedal Unit is highest-note priority and it can play only one note at a time, the players can play polyphonic bass lines by the help of traditional pedal sound. The sound generator is electrically similar to Solovox Model L. It consists of a vacuum tube oscillator and five frequency divider circuits, controlled by a volume and 8-stop tablets (Bourdon 32', Bombarde 32', 16', 8', 4', 2' & 1', mute, pedal solo on) placed on the right side of lower manual. Although there are five revisions of units, these are interchangeable on all RT series consoles.[37]

S series
Chord Organ
1950–1966[38]

First chord organ. Its 'easy to play'[39] style initiated a new market segment leading to today's home keyboard market.[40] The S series Chord Organ can be played via following interfaces:[38]

  • 37-note keyboard for solo or chords
  • 96-chord buttons (12-semitones × 8-chords variation) for chords
  • 2 wire touch-plates for strumming effect
  • 2 bass pedals for root & 5th
  • 1 expression pedal (or knee lever) for total volume control
  • 3 volume knobs for volume of each part (solo, chord, bass)

Transistor organs[edit]

Hammond started to produce transistor organs when the production of tonewheels became too expensive, switching to full-time Integrated Circuit (IC) models in 1975.[41][42]

ImageModel Name / NumberYears producedDescription
Aurora (Century, Custom and Classic)[citation needed]1975[26]First composite spinet organ with both drawbars and electronic voices, no tonewheels.

Classic top of range with strings brass and presets.Final model had pro-chord.[citation needed]

B30001978[43] (or 1975[44])Solid-state copy of the B-3, with additional string division, electric and grand pianos. Key click was re-introduced.[26] Supplied with matching Leslie HL-722.[citation needed]
Cadette
(model V,VS)
1969–1970s[45][46]Entry-level all-tab transistor spinet organ, no tonewheels. This series were all designed in the United States, built in Japan, and subsequently also assembled in England: Initially, first series were built by Yamaha (c.1969–), then by Nihon Hammond during 1973–1975. Subsequently Hammond UK began to import these models in kit form, and assembled in proper wooden cases for domestic market.[45][46]
Colonnade1979[47] or 1982[48]Console version of Aurora Classic.[citation needed]
MonarchConsole organ 1975-?
Commodore—Single set of drawbars.[citation needed]
Elegante1980s[citation needed]Hammond 1980`s Flagship 2 x 61 note manuals,25 pedals everything on it.[citation needed]
Concorde1972 - c.1977[49] (or 1973[26])First LSI-based Hammond console organ with drawbars, no tonewheels.[26] This model was once erroneously advertised as a next generation top model take over the X-77, called X-99; though, its official name was a Concorde.[50]
Cougar1973–1976[51]Transistor spinet organ with drawbars, in some extent, corresponded to a kind of successor of L-100 series tonewheel spinet organ, although its new drawbars arrangement is slightly exotic; its upper manual has normal nine drawbars; on the other hand, lower manual has only two 8' drawbars with sawtooth. This anomalous design was only followed by a few models (8000 series, 8100 series, and 8200 Aurora series).[51]
Dolphin1973–1976[52]Spinet organ with built-in polyphonic synthesizer and 20 one finger chords.
J-1001967–1968[53](Late 1960s[31])Transistor spinet organ - no tonewheels
Maverick1973–1975[54]Middle-priced all-tab spinet organ.
Phoenix1972[26]First LSI-based all-tab Hammond spinet organ.
Piper Autochord1970–1979[55]First automatic chording instrument. Single manual, with automatic rhythm, automatic chording and no bass pedals.[26][56]
Portable B-1001980–1984[57]Single manual version of B-250.[57]
Portable B-200—Successor of X-5, portable version of Aurora 8222.[58]
Portable B-2501980–1984[59]2 x 61 note manuals.[59]
Portable B-300—B-200 plus strings, portable version of Aurora Classic 232000.[60]
Portable B-400—Only drawbars to upper, drum machine and Midi.[61]
Portable X-21978[26]Single manual version of X-5.[62]
Portable X-51979[12]Portable spinet, transistor copy of the B-3 (or Porta B), derived from Ace Tone GT-7[63] circa 1971. Manufactured by Nihon Hammond, a Japanese joint venture between main company and Sakata (parent company of Ace Tone).
Regent1973–1976[64]First all-tab theatre style Hammond organ.
Romance series1977–1983[65]Integrated circuit generated spinet organ. No drawbars.
Sounder1973[26]First Hammond to retail for under $500, sold through both music and mass merchant outlets. Single manual organ.

Digital organs[edit]

After the Hammond Organ Company ceased trading in 1985, production initially went to Noel Crabbe's Hammond Organ Australia, and then to Suzuki Musical Instrument Corporation, who, under the name Hammond-Suzuki, manufacture digital organs.[66]

ImageModel Name / NumberYears producedDescription
Super B1986[48]First full-digitally sampled Hammond organ, with dual manual, downloadable voice tables, and MIDI.[48][67]
XB-21991–1998[12]Single manual organ. First digital organ produced by Hammond-Suzuki.
XB-31993–1998[68]Dual manual organ with 4 sets of drawbars, reverse colour presets and waterfall keys. In an extended B3 case.[citation needed]
XB-51993[68]—?Two manual organ with two sets of drawbars and bass drawbars.[69]
XM-1 / XM-c11997–2005[68]MIDI organ module (XM-1) with drawbar controller (XM-c1)
XB-11998–2005[68]Standalone version of the XM-1
XK-21999–2004[70]Improved XB-2 with waterfall keys
XE series—XE-1 / XE-2 / XE-200: Modular all singing and dancing single manual modular organ (XE-1), dual manual(XE-2), and built in cabinet (XE-200)[citation needed]
New B-32003–present[71]A replica of the original B-3 with digitally generated tonewheel simulation
XK-12005–2011Cut down version of XK-3, but extended vib/cho settings later in XK-3C
XM-2 / XM-c22005–presentMIDI module version of the XK-1
XK-32004–2007Same internals as a New B-3 with cheaper keyboard base and built in Leslie simulator. Can be expanded with optional lower manual, stand and pedalboard.[72]
XK-3c2007–present[73]Updated version of the XK-3
SK12011–present[74]Stage keyboard with pianos and other instrument samples as well as organ
SK-22011–presentDual manual SK-1
XK-1c2013–presentImproved XK-1
XK-52016–present4 drawbar sets + pedal like B3, improved multicontact shallow keybed etc
SK-X2018–presentReplaced SK-2 and has 2 sets of drawbars, improved interface and 11-pin Leslie connector

References[edit]

  1. ^Bush & Kassel 2006, p. 168.
  2. ^Corbin 2006, p. 151.
  3. ^Waring 2002, p. 319.
  4. ^Reid, Gordon (November 2003). 'Synthesizing tonewheel organs'. Sound On Sound. Retrieved 25 April 2011.
  5. ^ abVail 2002, p. 68.
  6. ^ abcdVail 2002, p. 74.
  7. ^Vail 2002, pp. 74-75.
  8. ^ abVail 2002, p. 71.
  9. ^'Model B-A', The Hammond-Leslie FAQ, VintageHammond.com
  10. ^'Aeolian/Hammond Player Organ', Hammond Products, OrganHouse.com. – Two manufacturer plates can be confirmed : one is 'Hammond Organ Mechanism Model BA' by Hammond Instrument Co., and the other is 'Aeolian-Hammond Player model BA' by Aeolian-Skinner organ Co.
  11. ^ abVail 2002, p. 69.
  12. ^ abcdefgSpark, Rod (October 1997). 'The History Of The Hammond'. Sound on Sound. Retrieved 30 July 2013.
  13. ^ abVail 2002, p. 49.
  14. ^Vail 2002, p. 19.
  15. ^Vail 2002, p. 76.
  16. ^ abVail 2002, p. 72.
  17. ^Vail 2002, p. 77.
  18. ^Vail 2002, p. 79.
  19. ^Vail 2002, p. 79-80.
  20. ^Vail 2002, p. 81.
  21. ^Vail 2002, p. 83.
  22. ^Vail 2002, p. 85.
  23. ^Vail 2002, p. 86.
  24. ^Faragher 2011, p. 78.
  25. ^BlueBook Hammond and Leslie & c.1984, p. H-9.
  26. ^ abcdefghijHammond Zone, Hammond Accomplishments 1970–1979
  27. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, Porta B - Portable L 100 serie uitvoeringen.
  28. ^ abcVail 2002, p. 89.
  29. ^Vail 2002, p. 91.
  30. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, R 100 serie Retrieved 5 August 2013.
  31. ^ abFaragher 2011, p. 85.
  32. ^Vail 2002, p. 93.
  33. ^Vail 2002, p. 96.
  34. ^Howell, Steve; Wilson, Dan. 'Novachord'. Hollow Sun. Retrieved 26 April 2011. See also site's History page.
  35. ^ abDe Hammond Encyclopedia, Solovox, een extra klavier
  36. ^Hammond Zone, The Hammond Solovox (1940).
  37. ^Pedal Solo Unit for RT, RT-2, & RT-3 Consoles(PDF). Service Manual. Hammond Organ Company.
  38. ^ abDe Hammond Encyclopedia, Hammond S-Series; The Chord Organ
  39. ^'New, Easy to Play, Inexhaustible, Exciting ... and Best of All ... Worthwhile ! — Hammond Chord Organ', ad, September 27, 1958
  40. ^Hammond Zone, Hammond Accomplishments 1950–1969
  41. ^Kakehashi 2002, p. 176.
  42. ^Riley 2006, pp. 58,63.
  43. ^BlueBook Hammond and Leslie & c.1984, p. H-33.
  44. ^Faragher 2011, p. 75.
  45. ^ abDe Hammond Encyclopedia, V-100 Cadette series — Serial number plates by Yamaha were printed as: 'Built by Nippon Gakki Company, Limited to Specifications of Hammond Organ Company, Chicago, ILL. Made in Japan'. Also vivid color tablet buttons and 'rice paper finish' wood print panel seem to share the design language of Yamaha Electone at that time.
  46. ^ abDe Hammond Encyclopedia, VE & VS series — De HAMMOND VS-serie — Serial number plates (probably not by Yamaha) were simply printed as: 'Hammond International, Chicago, ILL. Made in Japan'.
  47. ^BlueBook Hammond and Leslie & c.1984, p. H-32.
  48. ^ abcHammond Zone, Hammond Accomplishments 1980–1989
  49. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, Concorde.
  50. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, X-99.
  51. ^ abDe Hammond Encyclopedia, Cougar 7100 series
  52. ^BlueBook Hammond and Leslie & c.1984, pp. H-20–H-22.
  53. ^Introductory Section, Service Manual 1970, p. SC-12.
  54. ^BlueBook Hammond and Leslie & c.1984, p. H-18.
  55. ^BlueBook Hammond and Leslie & c.1984, p. H-14.
  56. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, Hammond Piper Autochord.
  57. ^ abDe Hammond Encyclopedia, Hammond B-100 Portable
  58. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, Hammond B-200 Portable.
  59. ^ abDe Hammond Encyclopedia, Hammond B-250 Portable
  60. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, Hammond B-300 Portable.
  61. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, De Hammond B-400 Portable.
  62. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, Hammond X-2.
  63. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, Hammond X-5.
  64. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, Regent 4100 Series.
  65. ^Welch, Jerry (2011). 'Organ Identification'. Organ Service Company, Inc. Retrieved 31 July 2013.
  66. ^Faragher 2011, p. 14.
  67. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, Hammond Super B.
  68. ^ abcdMagnus, Nick (October 1998). 'Hammond XB1'. Sound on Sound. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  69. ^De Hammond Encyclopedia, Hammond XB-5, 'Bovenmanuaal met 61 toetsen - 9 drawbars / Ondermanuaal 61 toetsen - 9 drawbars / Pedaal 25 tonig - 2 drawbars'
  70. ^Jacques, David (2001). 'Review: Hammond-Suzuki XK-2'. none. Archived from the original on 2014-12-27. Retrieved 2 Feb 2014.
  71. ^Hugh Robjohns. 'Hammond B3: Modelled Electromechanical Tonewheel Organ'. Sound On Sound (July 2003). Archived from the original on 2006-11-06.
  72. ^Robjohns, Hugh (July 2005). 'Hammond XK3/XLK3 & Leslie 2121/2101'. Sound on Sound. Retrieved 31 July 2013.
  73. ^Hart, Terry (12 August 2011). 'Hammond XK-3C'. Mixdown Magazine. Archived from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  74. ^Fortner, Stephen (13 December 2011). 'Hammond SK1'. Keyboard Magazine. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
Bibliography
Hammond Manual Pdf
  • Bush, Douglas Earl; Kassel, Richard (2006). The Organ: An Encyclopedia. Routledge Chapman & Hall. ISBN978-0-415-94174-7.
  • Corbin, Alfred (2006). The Third Element: A Brief History of Electronics. AuthorHouse. ISBN978-1-4678-1338-9.
  • Faragher, Scott (2011). The Hammond Organ : An introduction to the instrument and the players who made it famous. Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN978-1-4584-0287-5.
  • Kakehashi, Ikutarō (2002). I Believe in Music: Life Experiences and Thoughts on the Future of Electronic Music by the Founder of the Roland Corporation. Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN978-0-634-03783-2.
  • Riley, Chris (2006). The Modern Organ Guide. Xulon Press. ISBN978-1-59781-667-0.
  • Vail, Mark (2002). The Hammond Organ: Beauty in the B. Backbeat Books. ISBN978-0-87930-705-9.
  • Waring, Dennis G (2002). Manufacturing the Muse: Estey Organs and Consumer Culture in Victorian America. Wesleyan University Press. ISBN978-0-8195-6508-2.
Other sources
Hammond
  • 'De Hammond Encyclopedia' (in Dutch). Hammond Toonwielorgelvereniging Netherland [Hammond Oragn Club Holland] (hammondclub.nl). Retrieved 2013-08-06.
  • Service Manual. Hammond Organ Company.
    • Introductory Section (Hammond Organ Models)(PDF). Winterpark, FL: Audio Playground Synthesizer Museum. 2001 [1970]. Archived from the original(retyped PDF) on 2010-11-24. Retrieved 2013-08-07. (recreation of original in 1970); Originally published as: Introductory Section. Service Manual. Melrose Park, Illinois: Hammond Organ Company. 1970. HO-495-1-2500.
    • The Blue Book of HAMMOND(PDF). 2001 [c. 1975]. Archived from the original(retyped PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
      Note: It seems a retyped copy of original 'Introductory Section' of Service Manual in circa 1975, or similar.
    • BlueBook Hammond and Leslie(scanned image in PDF). 2009 [c. 1984]. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
      Note: It seems a reprint of 'Introductory Section' of Service Manual circa 1984, or similar.
  • 'History & Reference'. Hammond Zone (hammond-organ.com). Archived from the original on 2018-02-22. Retrieved 2013-08-06.
Hammond xk 3 manual pdf
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hammond organs.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_Hammond_organs&oldid=884770562'

Download Film 3 Pocong Idiot Full Movie Mp4
The Official Highway Code 2013 Pdf Download

  • Recent Posts

    • Mukesh Khanna All Song Download
    • Fabric Of The Cosmos Epub Downloads
    • Quickbooks Pro 2008 Isopropyl
    • Download Blood Lad Episode 4 Sub Indonesia
    • Adobe Photoshop Cs6 Crack Free Download For Windows 7 32bit
    • Marwadi Vivah Song 2013 Download
    • Life Is Good Vodafone Ad Song Download
    • Kyle Schwarber
    • Vichitra Sodarulu Telugu Movie Free Download
    • Download After Burner Climax Pc Richards
    • Exe To Apk File Converter Free Download For Pc
    • Java Installation
    • Ayyappa Devotional Songs Download
    • Pdf Zentangle Patterns To Print
    • Fender Squier Strat Affinity Serial Number Indonesia
    • Mc Menor Do Chapa Malandragem E Ser Malandro Download
    • Download Torrent Intervista Col Vampiro Ita
    • Lords Of Karma A Tribute To Vai And Satriani Rar File
Copyright © 2019 nevadalogoboss.
  • Up