Jc-120 | Schematic
“Dad.”
R117: 1k (no, 2.2k? no—silence) C23: 47uF (replace with 100uF, bleed faster) D4: 1N4148 (remove. bridge. let it flow both ways.) jc-120 schematic
The paper was the color of weak coffee, stained along the edges where someone’s thumb had rested for decades. It smelled of solder smoke, basement ozone, and the faint ghost of a 1985 Marlboro. To anyone else, it was a schematic: the Roland JC-120 Jazz Chorus. A grid of lines, triangles, circles, and Japanese characters that looked less like engineering and more like a map of the stars. “Dad
The JC-120 hummed. Then the chorus engaged. Two signals, slightly out of phase. One voice—hers—arriving a fraction of a second after the other. But her father’s modification, the red-ink change to the clock generator, had stretched that delay. Not to a slapback echo. To something else. The second voice arrived 2.7 seconds later. Then a third. Then a fourth. let it flow both ways
A cough. A chair creaking. The sound of a Zippo lighter.
A memory amplifier.
She found it tucked behind the peeling fiberboard of her late father’s workbench, sandwiched between a dead 9-volt battery and a dog-eared copy of Guitar Player magazine. Her father, Silas, hadn’t spoken to her in eleven years. He hadn’t spoken to anyone, really. He just repaired amplifiers for ghosts—old men with tremors and vintage Les Pauls who wanted to hear their youth one more time before their hearing went.