ER wrote:My question is how did you split the signal out of the pre-amp, as well as bring it back to the dry power amp?
Most of the original 2nd generation ODS amps have originally been built without a loop but with only a "preamp out" (see the attached 2nd generation layout). So the power amp of the 2nd generation ODS combo only sees the dry signal anyway. So this combo is and stays the "dry only amp" in any kind of multi channel setup anyway.
For a "wet/dry/wet" three channel setup you connect the "preamp out" of the original 2nd generation circuit with the "input" of a Dumbleator II. AFAIU this tech stuff the Dumbleator then helps to "isolate" what happens after the "preamp out" outside the 2nd generation combo from what happens inside the 2nd generation combo.
Then you connect the "send" output of the Dumblelator II with the input of some stereo fx device set up for internal "mono in / stereo out" processing.
Then you connect the two L/R stereo outputs of the stereo fx device with the two "A" and "B" "return" inputs of the Dumbleator II.
Then you connect the two "A" and "B" "recover" outputs of the Dumbleator II with two separate power amps (Odyssey Concert e.g.) connected to two separate speaker cabinets.
So you have the 2nd generation ODS combo "dry channel" and two additional wet channels - one for the R and one for the L stereo fx signal. And you have (at least) three indipendent volume controls: One for the "dry channel" (ODS master volume), one for the wet R fx channel ("recover A"), and one for the wet L fx channel ("recover B").
Does this "low level tech" kind of explanation make some sense in regard to your questions?
@Aaron: I'll look and listen again to this video to find an answer to your questions.
picture source:
http://personalpages.manchester.ac.uk/s ... ator%20II/
Cheers,
Max
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