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34001
This was the very first Optigan.
There aren't too many of them around any more. The main difference between this Optigan
and later Optigans was that the 34001 only had one amp and one speaker. It was dubbed
the "monaural" unit. Apart from this, the grill cloth was different, the
music rack was different, and (like the early model 35001's) it featured the old-style
metronome. This early metronome did not use fiber optics- instead, there was a simple
piece of plastic called a "light pipe." One end of this pipe rested above
the metronome area of the disc, and the other end protruded from the keyboard cover.
The light traveled through the pipe and flashed on the other end. This design was
pretty cheesy, even by Optigan standards, and was soon replaced with the more common
fiber-optic cable metronome, with the familiar light-dot flashing inside the Optigan
emblem above the keyboard. |
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35001
This Optigan was the immediate successor to the 34001, and early models featured
the "light pipe" style metronome (see 34001). This was a "stereophonic"
unit, with separate amps/speakers for the chords/keyboard. The 35001 also featured
a spring reverb. |
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35002
This is probably the most common Optigan. Essentially it's the exact same machine
as the 35001, except that it doesn't have reverb. This means that the 35002 has one
less knob on the control panel than the 35001. Optigan was, of course, too cheap
to make two different versions of the keyboard overlay (i.e., one with the hole for
the reverb knob and one without), so for the 35002 they simply placed the little
aluminum "Stereophonic" plate over the reverb knob hole! |
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35011
This, the was the most expensive of the Optigan consoles, and it was actually made
of real wood!! Well, veneer-covered plywood, anyway! This unit featured reverb, and
the little aluminum plate said "Custom Stereophonic" instead of the usual
"Stereophonic." |
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35012
Ah, the ugliest Optigan of them all!! The "Mediterranean" model was molded
in dark-brown temperite, with sharp/flat keys to match. This model also came with
reverb. For some reason, under Opsonar this model's number was changed to 35009.
Apart from this difference, they are the same console. I've heard that the styling
of this Optigan closely matched the interior design of Nixon's Western White House
in Yorba Linda, CA... but that's another story!! |
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37003
Apart from the prototype Optigan cabinet designs, this is the Optigan console most
shrouded in mystique. The one that I discovered in a thrift store a few years ago
is the only one I've ever seen, and I have never seen any explicit mention of it
in any Optigan printed materials. This much I know: It's made of real wood, and was
apparently designed exclusively for Montgomery Wards. It features the same dark brown
temperite as the 35012. The real distinguishing feature of this Optigan, though,
is the flip-top lid!! This feature is completely perplexing, because there's really
nothing you can fully access to service by opening the lid! As far as I can tell,
the Montgomery Wards brass probably said something like "we like it, but shouldn't
it be easier to get in there to fix it??" to which the Optigan folks probably
said "well how about if we make it so you can open the top??" Anyway...
the most useful function of the opening top that I've found is that it gives you
access to the flywheel, which you can manual press your finger against for cool pitch-bend
effects!! As a side note, this Optigan must have come about under Opsonar, because
it's cabinet design is very similar to some of the Estey organs being produced by
Miner at that time. |