Before the invention of audio delay technology, music employing an echo had to be recorded in a naturally
reverberant space, often an inconvenience for musicians and engineers. The demand for an easy-to-use real-time echo effect led to the production of systems offering an all-in-one
effects unit that could be adjusted to produce echoes of any interval or amplitude. The presence of multiple
taps (
playback heads) made it possible to have delays at varying rhythmic intervals; this allowed musicians an additional means of expression over natural periodic echoes.
Tape delay Early experiments such as
send tape echo echo delay (STEED) at
Abbey Road Studios used standard and modified
reel-to-reel tape recorders to produce delay. Delay processors based on analog tape recording use
magnetic tape as their recording and playback medium. Electric motors guide a tape loop through a device with a variety of mechanisms allowing modification of the effect's parameters. Popular models include Ray Butts'
EchoSonic (1952), the
Watkins Copicat (1958), the
Echoplex (1959) In the Echoplex EP-2, the play head position was fixed, while a combination record and erase head was mounted on a slide, thus the delay time of the echo was adjusted by changing the distance between the record and play heads. The Space Echo uses a free-running
tape transport system to reduce tape wear, noise, and
wow and flutter, and made the units more reliable and easy to transport. It was more reliable and sturdy than previous tape echo devices, making it easy to travel and perform with. Thin magnetic tape was not entirely suited for continuous operation, however, so the tape loop has to be replaced from time to time to maintain the
audio fidelity of the processed sounds. The
Binson Echorec used a rotating magnetic drum or disc (not entirely unlike those used in modern
hard-disk drives) as its storage medium. This provided an advantage over tape, as the durable drums were able to last for many years with little deterioration in the audio quality. In later years, tape delay effects remained popular for the way the tape compresses and distorts, "creating the impression that the echoes are receding rather than just getting quieter".
Oil can An alternative echo system was the so-called
oil-can delay method, which uses electrostatic rather than electromagnetic recording. Invented by
Ray Lubow, the oil-can method uses a rotating disc of
anodized aluminium coated with a suspension of carbon particles. An AC signal to a conductive neoprene wiper transfers the charge to the high impedance disc. As the particles pass by the wiper, they act as thousands of tiny capacitors, holding a small part of the charge. A second wiper reads this representation of the signal and sends it to a voltage amplifier that mixes it with the original source. To protect the charge held by the particles and to lubricate the entire assembly, the disc runs inside a sealed can with enough of a special
insulating oil to assure that an even coating is applied as it spins. The effect resembles an echo, but the whimsical nature of the storage medium causes variations in the sound that can be heard as a vibrato effect. Some early models featured control circuitry designed to feed the output of the read wiper to the write wiper, causing a reverberant effect as well. Many different companies marketed these devices under various names. Fender sold the Dimension IV, the Variable Delay, the Echo-Reverb I, II, and III, and included an oil can in their Special Effects box. Gibson sold the GA-4RE from 1965–67. Ray Lubow himself sold many different versions under the Tel-Ray/Morley brand, starting out in the early sixties with the Ad-n-echo, and eventually producing the Echo-ver-brato, the Electrostatic Delay Line, and many others into the eighties.
Solid-state delay The
bucket-brigade device (BBD) was developed at Philips in 1969. Delay effects utilizing this technology eventually became available. Notable examples include the Memory Man from Electro-Harmonix, released in 1976, and the Boss DM-2 released in 1981. BBD-based devices offered a convenient alternative to tape delays and
leslie speakers but were eventually largely supplanted by digital delays. ==Digital delay==