FX67 Stereo Turbo Chorus
Both cosmetic variants of the FX67 Stereo Turbo Chorus,
from 1988 (left) and late 1989The FX67 Stereo Turbo Chorus was introduced in early 1988 as the "top of the line" chorus effect in DOD's lineup, with a suggested list price of $140. Featuring two independent chorus circuits (each based on the two-knob FX60), but no ability to switch between them, the FX67 was best used as part of a two-amp setup. The FX67 was discontinued in mid-1990 with the introduction of the FX68 Super Stereo Chorus.
- Controls: Speed A, Depth A, Speed B, Depth B (Speed varying from 0.8-8 Hz, Depth varying delay time of 5-8 ms)
- From the manual: "The new Stereo Turbo Chorus gives a rich, thick, ebuillient chorusing effect not available before from a single chorus unit. The FX 67 Stereo Turbo Chorus has two completely independent chorus circuits. These chorus circuits are varied by a unique modulation scheme and mixed together which makes a distinctive chorusing sound. This technique gives the user truly different right and left outputs from a single chorus unit. The right and left chorus circuits are derived from separate chorus circuits and do not cancel each other out if summed together. This unique chorusing effect is unduplicatable even with the use of two separate chorus units."
- Notable IC chips: Two MN3007 BBD chips
- Related circuit: FX60 (loosely based)
- FX heritage: FX67
FX68
FX64
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