Catalinbread Adineko

 239

Delivery time around 14 days

Catalinbread Adineko Oil can delay units were manufactured by a company named Tel-Ray who later became better known as Morley. Tel-Ray mostly focused on being the OEM utilizing their oil can technology (Patent US3530227 A), branding units for Gibson (GA-RE4), Fender (Dimension IV), Acoustic, etc.

They employed an electro-static storage method where the signal is “recorded” to a spinning disk, a layer of oil (for years rumored to be a mysterious carcinogenic oil) prevented this signal from leaking into the air before a “pickup” moments later played back the signal recorded to the disk.

Compared to the counterparts of the day (tape, drum, wire delay machines), their sound was more low fidelity, murky, often with a more consistent musical vibrato that correlated to the spinning disk speed. We like to describe the sound as mysterious. The Catalinbread ADINEKO pedal is an echo, reverb, vibrato pedal that faithfully models the sonic experience of these oil can units.

Catalinbread Adineko demo video

Available on backorder

SKU: 853710004314 Category:
Catalinbread

Description

  • Effect: Delay
  • Design: Analog
  • Mono/Stereo: Mono In, Mono Out
  • Knobs: Reverb, Viscosity, Timing, Blend, Balance
  • Modes: –
  • Switches: –
  • Bypass Mode: True Bypass
  • Power Supply: 9 – 18 Volt DC, center negative
  • Power Consumption: 59 of 63 mA
  • Works on Batteries: Yes
  • Type Batterij: 9 V Batterij
  • Format: Standard
  • Measurements (BxHxD / cm): 6,2 x 3,3 x 11,4
  • Made in: USA

Additional information

Weight 0,5 kg
Dimensions 11,4 × 6,2 × 3,3 cm
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Stock

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Catalinbread

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Guitar

Type

Delay

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Mono In / Mono Out

Brand

Catalinbread

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Back before most people heard the term “boutique” in reference to music gear, something was brewing in all corners of the globe, spurred by the Internet and the ability to share information freely. Guitar players began to look backwards to move forwards, combining time-tested approaches to pedalcraft with forward-thinking ideas. The Pacific Northwest’s answer to this boom was Catalinbread, born in 2003 on Nic Harris’s kitchen table. After producing the Super Chili Picoso, the first Catalinbread-branded pedal exclusively for ToneFactor, a Seattle-based guitar shop.

Adventurous designs

The sales of this fur-lined pedal went on to fund some more adventurous designs, and before long Catalinbread had outgrown both its business model and modest shop space, packing up the truck and ending up in Portland, Oregon. We’ve been here since 2006, now manufacturing over 30 unique pedals, built by human hands, one by one.
Catalinbread

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