DELTA MEMOTRON CASINGS AND INTERNALS - click images for enlargements.
 
Classic Styling . . . .
Simple, Understated looks
stand out from the
'Black Vinyl Brigade'.
Hand-Crafted . . . .
English-Oak cabinet
with dovetail joints and
sturdy leather handle.
Reproduction . . . .
Specially reproduced
Vintage-Wireless
Tygan Grille-Cloth
and Piping.
Everything where it should be . . . .
Amp-Chassis mounted on base lowers
center of gravity so your valves are
the right way up, and easily accessible
through the rear Port-Hole vent.
Genuine . . . .
Accutronics Reverb
with traditional
Valve / Transformer driver.
Point-to-Point . . . .
Wiring and quality
eyelet board
construction.

 
THE MEMOTRON RECIPE SPANS 70 YEARS !
 
1930's/40's   1950's   1960/70's   1980/90's
First
6V6 Valve
Produced

  First Alnico
Guitar Speaker
Introduced

  Accutronics
Reverb
Available
  First
EEPROM
Produced

First
Guitar Amps
Appear

 
First
ECC83's
Available

 
First
Microprocesor
Produced
 
Low-Cost
Micro-Controller
Available

 
6V6 Valve (1937)
We hand-wire these in the output stage to create stunning tone clarity and sweet power amp crunch!
There's never been a better and more rugged 'bottle' than this!
 
Guitar Amp Evolution Begins (1940's)
The Hawaiian music craze of the time required amplified Steel Guitar.
The first Guitar Amps begin to appear. Many used the good old 6V6 !
 
ECC83 Valve & Alnico Guitar Speaker (1950's)
We use ECC83's in the pre-amp stages, using point-to-point and quality eyelet board wiring, to produce super clean through to classic overdrive tone.
The Alnico speaker in our 'Vintage' Amps, delivers a precise, focussed sound with plenty of bite. When cranked-up, the subtle cone compression takes your sound to another level!
This speaker is the sound of 60's BritRock!
 
Accutronics Reverb (1960's)
We use this classic unit, driven in the traditional valve/transformer way, to get that authentic reverb sound that only an Accutronics spring can produce!

 
First Microprocessors (1970's)
The advances in chip technology since the first
Intel 4004 Microprocessor led to the development of . .

 
First EEPROM Memory (1980's)
We use a small EEPROM memory chip to store your sound settings.

 
Low-Cost Micro-Controller (1990's)
It was not until the 90's that small & cheap chips became available.
We use these to control the Memotron circuitry and editing functions.

 
Delta Memotron Invented (2007)
 
We use a Micro-Chip and Memory to control, save and
retrieve the knob settings in a classic valve amp design.
This means we can produce an amp with many channels that
hasn't got loads of knobs: The MEMOTRON.

 
We've also been very careful not to compromise tone.
The MEMOTRON only controls the knobs.
The guitar signal-path is pure hand-wired valve circuitry
from input through to speaker!
You're precious tone doesn't pass through chips, transistors, or
any other modern device of any kind!

 
KNOB TWIDDLERS ! THE END IS NIGH