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How about just a random picture. NOT the entire car

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Howick house Demo.jpg


There was a massive party in that house the previous night. A demolition party. Bring your own box and an axe. :lol:
 
Factory reverb (reverberator) removed from a 1967 Chrysler 300 and installed in my 1967 GTX. It's connected to a factory AM/FM radio through a factory rear speaker fader/reverb dash switch and outputs to an 80s Chrysler speaker.

This reverb is an electromechanical unit with a dual germanium transistor amplifier coupled with the spring tank which was made by Hammond Organ.

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Factory reverb (reverberator) removed from a 1967 Chrysler 300 and installed in my 1967 GTX. It's connected to a factory AM/FM radio through a factory rear speaker fader/reverb dash switch and outputs to an 80s Chrysler speaker.

This reverb is an electromechanical unit with a dual germanium transistor amplifier coupled with the spring tank which was made by Hammond Organ.

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Sweet setup, I’ll bet it rocked in its time
 
Sweet setup, I’ll bet it rocked in its time

It did and still does. It's rather simplistic compared to later and modern audio, but it does one thing that electronic synthesized reverbs can't. You can shake the car in various ways and alter the reverb action so the sound varies in sync with the shaking.
 
I pirated the same setup out of a 1966 Chrysler 300, and transferred it to my 1967 R/T. I mounted the reverb unit on the floor, under the rear seat, as it was on the Chrysler. Your mounting looks pretty neat. I also adapted the lens from my AM radio to the Chrysler AM/FM, and mounted it in the dash. This was a primo sound system back in 1966, but really pales with what is available now. It doesn't sound too bad with music playing, but when an announcer is talking, it sounds like he speaking from inside a steel drum. Delayed echo effect.
 
It did and still does. It's rather simplistic compared to later and modern audio, but it does one thing that electronic synthesized reverbs can't. You can shake the car in various ways and alter the reverb action so the sound varies in sync with the shaking.
Lets hear it!
 
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