Author |
Message |
hydrargyrum
Senior Member Username: hydrargyrum
Post Number: 807 Registered: 3-2004
| Posted on Wednesday, June 09, 2010 - 2:04 pm: | |
I was just curious whether anyone here owns/has owned a green ringer, and what your thoughts were on it. I'm thinking of building an effects pedal that combines a Colorsound one knob fuzz clone with a green ringer clone, in one enclosure. My own sort of mutant octavia. |
funkyjazzjunky
Senior Member Username: funkyjazzjunky
Post Number: 580 Registered: 5-2007
| Posted on Thursday, June 10, 2010 - 2:01 pm: | |
What is a green ringer? |
artswork99
Moderator Username: artswork99
Post Number: 1169 Registered: 7-2007
| Posted on Thursday, June 10, 2010 - 2:16 pm: | |
The Green Ringer Effect Pedal from Dan Armstrong can have a single note played into it and will produce a second tone one octave above the original note. If two notes are played into it, it will produce sum and different tones just like a ring modulator. Depending on the musical interval between the two notes, the additional tones the Green Ringer produces will be harmonically related to the original notes (such as sub octaves) or dissonant. The Ringer guitar pedal gives the musician much better control over the effect produced than a conventional ring modulator, since he is no longer playing against an arbitrary modulator frequency. It features Input Impedance of 100 k Ohms and has Output Impedance of 500 ohms, and a Signal-to-Noise ratio of 86 db. Attribution: http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/Dan-Armstrong-Green-Ringer-Guitar-Effects-Pedal?sku=150607 |
benson_murrensun
Advanced Member Username: benson_murrensun
Post Number: 286 Registered: 5-2007
| Posted on Thursday, June 10, 2010 - 2:18 pm: | |
It's a Martian marital aid, right? |
hydrargyrum
Senior Member Username: hydrargyrum
Post Number: 809 Registered: 3-2004
| Posted on Thursday, June 10, 2010 - 2:29 pm: | |
I guess they must not be too popular. |
paulman
Senior Member Username: paulman
Post Number: 439 Registered: 2-2005
| Posted on Friday, June 11, 2010 - 7:58 am: | |
I'd never heard of the Green Ringer before, but man it sounds interesting! Thanks for the lead Kevin.
|
hydrargyrum
Senior Member Username: hydrargyrum
Post Number: 810 Registered: 3-2004
| Posted on Friday, June 11, 2010 - 9:19 am: | |
No problem. I'm actually considering building this to eventually sell, but it will depend on how much I end up liking it, of course. |
lbpesq
Senior Member Username: lbpesq
Post Number: 4465 Registered: 7-2004
| Posted on Saturday, June 12, 2010 - 9:21 am: | |
Kevin: I assume you are looking at the combo Green Ringer/Orange Squeezer "Armstrong Twin" by Build Your Own Clone? I built one of their "Lazy Sprockets". If you have been around a soldering iron, you shouldn't have any trouble with the build. I love mine (a clone of the old Boss "Slow Gear" volume swell effect). This thread got me thinking and I'm now bidding on another brand DIY green ringer (no Squeezer) already built on eBay. Let us know if you get this and how the build goes. Bill, tgo |
hieronymous
Senior Member Username: hieronymous
Post Number: 786 Registered: 1-2005
| Posted on Sunday, June 20, 2010 - 2:16 pm: | |
Found this Green Ringer clone: chamber of sounds - zing (Message edited by hieronymous on June 20, 2010) |
lbpesq
Senior Member Username: lbpesq
Post Number: 4471 Registered: 7-2004
| Posted on Sunday, June 20, 2010 - 3:32 pm: | |
I received my General Guitar Gadgets Green Ringer clone I bought on eBay for $30. Such a deal! I'd never tried an octave pedal before. It's more subtle than I expected, but very cool. I suspect this will be a keeper. Bill, tgo |
hydrargyrum
Senior Member Username: hydrargyrum
Post Number: 813 Registered: 3-2004
| Posted on Sunday, June 20, 2010 - 7:13 pm: | |
Hey Bill, I'm actually looking into building one from a board you can purchase at GuitarPCB.com. In the mean time though I'm building a NPN fuzz face clone with adjustable bias, NOS transistors, and a huge sprague orange drop capacitor. |