Hallo,
Ik ben door dit filmpje op Youtube behoorlijk geïntrigeerd geraakt door deze synth, die volgens vintagesynth.com ook onder het merk Teisco op de markt is gebracht. Hier op het forum lees je er niet veel over (of kijk ik verkeerd?). Ik vind hem erg lekker klinken in dat filmpje. Wie hebben hem hier eigenlijk allemaal? Hoeveel moet zo'n ding kosten in goede staat?
Van vintagesynth.com:
The SX-240 is a programmable polyphonic analog keyboard synthesizer with MIDI from Kawai. It was originally released under the Teisco brand-name. It is a well rounded analog synth with 2 DCOs (pulse, sawtooth and sub-osc), a lowpass filter with ADSR envelope, a flexible LFO, MIDI and 48 memory patches. In terms of patch editing, the SX-240 is very much like a Roland Alpha Juno or Moog Source which resort to using a dedicated data-wheel to edit the values of selected parameters when you edit sounds. It also has a built-in real-time 1500 note sequencer and chord memory. And the sequencer can be split into 8 separate 200 note songs, roughly. The SX-240 is cheaper and comparable to similar Sequential synthesizers from this time period like the SixTrak and the Prophet 600, but sound-wise, is not as popular or cool as them or any of the Roland synthesizers either.
Ik ben door dit filmpje op Youtube behoorlijk geïntrigeerd geraakt door deze synth, die volgens vintagesynth.com ook onder het merk Teisco op de markt is gebracht. Hier op het forum lees je er niet veel over (of kijk ik verkeerd?). Ik vind hem erg lekker klinken in dat filmpje. Wie hebben hem hier eigenlijk allemaal? Hoeveel moet zo'n ding kosten in goede staat?
Van vintagesynth.com:
The SX-240 is a programmable polyphonic analog keyboard synthesizer with MIDI from Kawai. It was originally released under the Teisco brand-name. It is a well rounded analog synth with 2 DCOs (pulse, sawtooth and sub-osc), a lowpass filter with ADSR envelope, a flexible LFO, MIDI and 48 memory patches. In terms of patch editing, the SX-240 is very much like a Roland Alpha Juno or Moog Source which resort to using a dedicated data-wheel to edit the values of selected parameters when you edit sounds. It also has a built-in real-time 1500 note sequencer and chord memory. And the sequencer can be split into 8 separate 200 note songs, roughly. The SX-240 is cheaper and comparable to similar Sequential synthesizers from this time period like the SixTrak and the Prophet 600, but sound-wise, is not as popular or cool as them or any of the Roland synthesizers either.