Tone Report Weekly Issue 103 | Page 28

An al og O u t fi t t ers S can n er The pride of Champaign, Illinois, Analog Outfitters upcycles and repurposes busted Hammond organs and other vintage gear that is past its prime, to create ruggedly built, strikingly distinctive new pieces of gear. Tone Report Weekly has reviewed the company's Road Amp, with its enclosure built of decommissioned road signs, and its guts sourced from retired Hammond organ donors, and we found it to be as stunning to the ear as it is to the eye. In fact, we were so impressed with the amp, we refused to send it back. This year Analog Outfitters has introduced a new p roduct that has us all foaming at the mouth; The Scanner, a vibrato and reverb unit about the size of a small head, built from salvaged Hammond organ vibrato scanners and reverb tanks. Originally a component of vintage tone-wheel organs, the vibrato scanner is a unique mechanism that creates nine phase-shifted copies of the input signal to create an incredibly deep, threedimensional vibrato sound that can't be achieved any other way. It also features a lush vintage reverb circuit, and the whole contraption is housed in a handsome cabinet with a heavy-duty acrylic top, so you can stare at the hypnotically rotating armature as your ears are massaged by warm modulation and rich ambience. The Scanner is a handmade, heirloom-quality piece of gear that you'll want to pass down to your children, or be buried with, and it sells for $1,599. 28 TONE TALK // 2015 Holiday Fantasy Wish List