I’d have thought so if the resolution of the pics is good enough to see the part numbers
As a child of the 70’s I’m down with brown… and some cream… and orange
you can purchase the 70’s platform shoes, flares and huge glasses off vinted / ebay too… for the full on geography teacher look from 70’s tv … starsky and hutch type vibe… and maybe go for a big woolly cardigan
Have you been spying through my window again?
Coveting all that Yamaha fake rosewood…
I can’t read the part codes sadly. Like I say, as soon as they’re out in the wild the truth will out!
They probably did it intentionally. The pic is from a facebook post.
the world was a better place when everyone had afros/70s
and the music exquisite…
I might have imagined this but did they say somewhere they’re using a DAC per channel/instrument?
I thought so, but it may also be my imagination so I don’t know if that changes much!
This is from their new video so one would assume unless they’re using either the number 16 or the acronym DAC very liberally, that this is something you can take at face value.
Is it the same DAC chips as used in the Rossum SP1200 reissue?
Well there are 15 instrument channels and a click channel so a DAC per channel would make sense
Until someone pulls one apart I don’t think we’ll know. Unless a beta tester has already done it
Id be really interested in that one as Dave Rossum and Roger Linn go back a long way.
Did you mean the same in the Rossum as the SP? Can’t say but that info should be out there somewhere. Whether the same chips were still available to Dave Rossum as were used x years before in the OG is another matter. They could well have been obsolete for a long time.
Rossum said he got some 12 bit replacements yes that were pretty much exactly the same as the original. Now we could have a poor mans SP1200 on our hands here as we can import samples and play them back with that legendary lofi grit which is the holy grail for the hip hop community/
The linndrum and sp1200 came out 7 years apart, a lot happened in technology between 1980 and 1987, they might have gone with something newer. At the time newer, I mean.
I don’t know if you were even talking about linn vs the sp1200 though.
I’m mostly interested to hear how sampling sounds through the native inputs. I suspect you get a nice grit.
It must be close. Better than the MPC emulation
Did you watch the latest vid? He samples a loop in that and pitches it up and down. How useful that’ll be is questionable with YT compression etc but he deffo does it
How long is the sample time per pad does anyone know?