moog! as you can (barely) see, the 35 cabinet, the lower one, has a row of full height modules and a row of half height module; the dotcom cabinet has two rows of full height modules.
This could easily be either a Moog, or the Club of the Knobs clone. As there are precious few Moogs, it could easily be the latter.
As the previous commenter noted, the lower cabinet has a row of full-height and a row of half-height modules. This rules out the synthesizers.com modular, which uses full-height modules only.
The blue lamps (LEDS?) suggest that this is not a Moog. However, custom systems are very common, taking advantage of the ease of combining modules for the different manufactures using the 5U full-height standard, and ±15v/+5 power.
moog!
ReplyDeleteas you can (barely) see, the 35 cabinet, the lower one, has a row of full height modules and a row of half height module; the dotcom cabinet has two rows of full height modules.
This could easily be either a Moog, or the Club of the Knobs clone. As there are precious few Moogs, it could easily be the latter.
ReplyDeleteAs the previous commenter noted, the lower cabinet has a row of full-height and a row of half-height modules. This rules out the synthesizers.com modular, which uses full-height modules only.
The blue lamps (LEDS?) suggest that this is not a Moog. However, custom systems are very common, taking advantage of the ease of combining modules for the different manufactures using the 5U full-height standard, and ±15v/+5 power.
yes, the blue leds are against an identification as full original moog stuff
ReplyDelete