Support |
Pedro- I had a Prime Time II, model 95 delay, many years ago. The II was a successor to the Super I believe, and was very similar with the addition of longer delay times (up to 7.7 seconds at 8 khz, or 3.84 at 16 khz), a multi-waveform sweep function (envelope following, sine and square outputs, the square wave was wonderful as a pitch mangler on long delays), "ducking" echo ability, and clock output. The Prime Time II looped nicely, cranking the regneration on either tap (the Prime Times were two tap delays, with tons of on board mixing capabilities) to 100% would hoild the sound cleanly for a quite awhile, and allow overdubbing. Hitting the infinite hold button locked the sound so it could sustain indefinitely without degradation, while shutting off any further input to the delay lines. All in all, it was a very "musical" and nice sounding box, the only negatives I can remember were that the delay modulation only had a 3 to 1 sweep ratio, rather limited for flanging, etc, and that the Prime Time II also had a habit of making a loud "pop" in the audio output when you switched to the 8 khz/long delay setting. If I found one in good shape, with the memory modules, and relatively cheap, I'd grab it in a second. Best- Mark >Hey gang - > >Anyone else here have the chance to catch Steve Morse live use a Lexicon >(Super?) PrimeTime to loop passages? > >I've seen these models on-line but have never had the chance to twiddle >one's dials and have no idea as to loop time or sampling rate, but SM was >one of the first people I saw loop live with that thing going back to the >D. >Dregs' heyday. > >Anyone have some first hand experience they'd be willing to share? > >Thanks, PedrOOrdeP