What a great specimen! Any idea how the reverse circuit works, or where I can find some info? I’m pretty sure it has something to do with the repeater (for which I found the schematics), but I can’t find any info specifically the reverse switch.
No clue, I’m a musician I don’t know how anything works.
The 1966 US Vox catalog described the V221 Phantom XII guitar as follows: “Unique Phantom 12-string design; ebony finger board; nickel-silver frets; exclusive 2-way string damper; 6 individual string bridges, true spring action vibrato.” The 1966 US Vox price list indicated that the retail price of the Mark XII guitar was $379.90 USD. Adjusting the 1966 price for inflation, the Phantom XII would retail today for about $2619 USD.
What a great specimen! Any idea how the reverse circuit works, or where I can find some info? I’m pretty sure it has something to do with the repeater (for which I found the schematics), but I can’t find any info specifically the reverse switch.
No clue, I’m a musician I don’t know how anything works.
The 1966 US Vox catalog described the V221 Phantom XII guitar as follows: “Unique Phantom 12-string design; ebony finger board; nickel-silver frets; exclusive 2-way string damper; 6 individual string bridges, true spring action vibrato.” The 1966 US Vox price list indicated that the retail price of the Mark XII guitar was $379.90 USD. Adjusting the 1966 price for inflation, the Phantom XII would retail today for about $2619 USD.