In addition to attenuating the output of the piano, you may need to
do the gain mod on the Rocky Road. They're notorious for having too
much gain even for guitars. I've performed this gain mod on a Rocky
Road, and it helped a lot, although it's still a fairly poor Leslie
sim, it's a pretty decent chorus box. Here's a summary of the mod
from a review by "dale" at Harmony Central, URL
http://www.harmony-
central.com/Effects/Data/Danelectro/DJ_20_Rocky_Road_Spinning_Speaker-
01.html :
Overall i think it's a great pedal except for the boost problem. So
i'll try to explain how to fiz that. In units like this they use
micro resistors that are little rectangular jobs that are about 1/16"
long and 1/2 as wide. This makes it reall hard to work on. A loop or
magnifying glass is almost absolutly necassary unless your eyesight
is incredible. [maybe mine is just really bad at 40 something *S*]
Basically, what you have to do is jump a resistor. thats means you
have to solder a wire from one end of the resisitor to the other so
the signal passes thru unrestricted. There are 2 main circuit boards
and a little one for the switches. The one you need to get to is the
one on which the speed and drive pots are located on. Take off the
board on top first by removing the 2 screws so you can get to the
target board. Remove the connector between the 2 boards. Then remove
the knobs and screws from the target board and lift it out. It'll
still be connected to the switch boaed by a ribbon cable that u cant
remove, but it has enough length to work with it. Directly in bach of
the drive pot you'll see 2 resistors. Thone closest to the pot is the
target. one end of it is up close to the L.E.D.'s. A small soldering
iron tip is necassary to do this. Solder a piece of very thin wire
from one end of the resistor to the other. Thats all there is to it.
However, as i said it's VERY VERY small, and it may be intimidating
to some.
===
A WORD OF WARNING: When taking the pedal apart, extreme caution is
needed when removing the knobs from the two control pots (necessary
before the main pcb can be removed). I thought I was being careful -
an even, gentle tugging with a suitable pair of pliers - yet I
managed to snap the shaft on the "gain" pot. It was lucky it was
the "gain" pot (ie the one I'm not likely to want to tweak - it can
still be moved with a small screwdriver, like a preset pot) and not
the "speed" one! This aside, the mod was relatively easy to do -
though I did double-check I had found the right resistor, by bridging
it with an opened-out paperclip while running a signal through the
guts of the pedal, before committing myself to solder!
--- In vintagesynthrepair@y..., mtcasino@c... wrote:
> Stephen:
>
> You are correct, too much signal into the input.
> Try something like this:
> http://www.dairiki.org/HammondWiki/index.php?
LineOutFromAHammondConsole
>
> Mike
> Mt. Holly NJ
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Kenety, Steve
> To: 'vintagesynthrepair@y...'
> Sent: Thursday, May 23, 2002 9:00 AM
> Subject: [vintagesynthrepair] Wurlie
>
>
> Folks:
>
> I just picked up the new Danelectro "Rocky Road" pedal, which is
a sort of
> ersatz Lelie simulator, much like the old Rotoverb. It works
fine with a
> guitar, but when I try to run my Wurlitzer 200A through it (or my
Roland
> E-7), all it does is screech. I suspect that it's overdriving
somehow to
> the max. Anybody have any experience with this?
>
> Thx--
>
> SAK
>
> S T E P H E N A. K E N E T Y
> Vice President, Management Supervisor
> DVC Communications
> 44 Whippany Road
> Morristown, NJ 07960
> ph: (973) 775-6352/fax: (973) 775-6732
> skenety@d...
> http://www.dvc.com
>
>
>
>
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