stetto
Left Unattended
Man, somethin' gotta be done...Some input from you 'lectronical types out there might hep...
I have a sweet Spector NS-2A, scalloped back, arched top, aerodynamic, ya know...After almost 20 years of abuse it's starting to get noisy, in the pots mostly, but I have other issues---The active board is one of those wierd "might be" 18-volt types, one battery clip is actually part of the circuit board, the other "floats" in the cavity--I've taken to wrapping the floater in soft foam so it doesn't knock around in there...Thing that I don't really get is that the active eq seems to work fine with only one of the batteries (in the circuit board clip) connected...I assume it's a redundant setup and actually 9 volts, the second battery a backup...or not...Whatever...
...I have to replace the volume/tone pots. They too are incorporated into the circuitboard, but that's not a problem...I'm just wondering if active eq technology has come that far since the 80s that it would be worth replacing the whole shebang...The Spector in question is a Kramer era instrument, and I assume early EMG electronics, though there are no markings proving as much...The circuitboard takes up the whole of the electronics cavity, and I know that technology has at least gotten smaller, so I'd be able to install a better battery-mount...
...Idunno, whaddaya think?
Thanks
Eric
I have a sweet Spector NS-2A, scalloped back, arched top, aerodynamic, ya know...After almost 20 years of abuse it's starting to get noisy, in the pots mostly, but I have other issues---The active board is one of those wierd "might be" 18-volt types, one battery clip is actually part of the circuit board, the other "floats" in the cavity--I've taken to wrapping the floater in soft foam so it doesn't knock around in there...Thing that I don't really get is that the active eq seems to work fine with only one of the batteries (in the circuit board clip) connected...I assume it's a redundant setup and actually 9 volts, the second battery a backup...or not...Whatever...
...I have to replace the volume/tone pots. They too are incorporated into the circuitboard, but that's not a problem...I'm just wondering if active eq technology has come that far since the 80s that it would be worth replacing the whole shebang...The Spector in question is a Kramer era instrument, and I assume early EMG electronics, though there are no markings proving as much...The circuitboard takes up the whole of the electronics cavity, and I know that technology has at least gotten smaller, so I'd be able to install a better battery-mount...
...Idunno, whaddaya think?
Thanks
Eric
)