Similar Listings

Malinovo, Slovakia
€3,333
Košice, Slovakia
€2,440.10
Bratislava, Slovakia
Originally €3,599, now €2,950 (19% price drop)
Radial LX8
Brand New
Ibbenbüren, Germany
€2,116.64
Košice, Slovakia
€3,190.68
Emmering, Germany
€3,977
Ibbenbüren, Germany
€2,872.94
Ibbenbüren, Germany
€2,015.80
Price Drop
Milab DC-196 Matched Pair
Brand New
Ibbenbüren, Germany
Originally €4,032.60, now €3,024.20 (26% price drop)
Tomasov, Slovakia
€1,999

About This Listing

1978, the Lexicon 224 was not the first digital reverb (that honor goes to EMT’s 250), but the 224 (and its 224X and 224XL cousins) was the most ubiquitous and popular high-end studio reverb in history.

The Lexicon 224 is an early digital reverb that was well known for its spacey, extra long decays. Vangelis was an early pioneer of the extra long decays using this unit, most famously in the Blade Runner soundtrack.

The reverb was conceived when Dr. David Griesinger, a nuclear physicist/musician/classical recording engineer, started working on a digital solution to reverb. Seeing EMT’s 250 encouraged him to merge a microcomputer with his reverb design.

The 224 reverberation system had a console-top controller with a four-rackspace brain, two inputs, four outputs and interchangeable programs to simulate chambers, plates and rooms. The 224 was “affordable” – meaning $7,500 with two programs or $7,900 with four programs.

But at half the price of EMT’s 250, the 224 was a hit. Eventually, the 224 evolved into the improved 224X and 224XL, which included the LARC (Lexicon Alphanumeric Remote Control), offering fingertip access to programs and parameters, dedicated function keys and a 24-character LED.

The Lexicon 224 used a fixed point processor, with a 16-bit word size. It was designed in the late 1970s using the best technology available, which at the time was the 8080 microprocessor, 12-bit converters (using DAC80 DAC IC), input transformers, and bucketloads of 74S/LS-series logic.

Although the converters themselves are 12-bit, a clever scaling circuit gives an extra 24dB of headroom by actively shifting the input gain. This gives a 16-bit conversion range overall, though precision is still only 12-bit.


Send me a message if you have any questions or want it to be shipped. I will check the prices for your country. 

Listed5 years ago
Condition
Brand
Model
  • 224
Finish
  • Black
Categories
Year
  • 1978
Made In
  • United States

About the Seller

Astra - Vintage Gear

Vienna, Austria
(46)
Joined Reverb:2019
Items Sold:83

Reverb Gives

Your purchases help youth music programs get the gear they need to make music.

Carbon-Offset Shipping

Your purchases also help protect forests, including trees traditionally used to make instruments.

Oops, looks like you forgot something. Please check the fields highlighted in red.