Waves 670 사용자 설명서

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1.2 Product Overview 
 
 
 
About the Fairchild 670 
 
Among gear aficionados, the stereo Fairchild 670 is considered the most coveted of all compressors, 
not only because of its pristine sound, but also its rarity and price: 670s routinely go for tens of 
thousands of dollars on the vintage market. (They originally cost less than $1000.) With 20 vacuum 
tubes and 11 hand-wired transformers in a hefty 6 rack-space chassis, these hard-to-find units weigh in 
at a robust 65 lbs. 
 
Designed by Estonian-born Rein Narma in the early 1950s, both the stereo 670 and its mono 
counterpart the Fairchild 660 use single push-pull amplification stages with extremely high control 
voltages. Both variable-mu limiters are unique in that they use tubes for gain reduction as well as 
amplification. Compression takes place directly in the audio path, rather than being routed to a separate 
circuit. 
 
Prior to the 660 and 670, Narma’s Gotham Audio Developments had built consoles and components for 
such luminaries as Rudy Van Gelder and Les Paul. Shortly after Paul asked Narma to build a limiter, 
Sherman Fairchild caught wind of the project, licensed the design, and hired Narma to come onboard 
as the company's chief engineer. After his stint at Fairchild, Narma relocated to the San Francisco Bay 
Area and became vice president of Ampex, pioneers of multitrack recording equipment. 
 
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