Description
Refurbished & recapped with high-quality Panasonic electrolytic capacitors. The power supply has been recapped with higher-value reservoir caps and additional decoupling added. Electrolytics in the audio path have been replaced with higher-value bipolar caps for better audio quality and all other electrolytic capacitors have been replaced. The pots & switches have been cleaned & lubricated. Tested & working 100%
Valley International was one of the incarnations of Valley People, Valley International and Allison Research. The common factor in all was Paul Buff, a recording engineer from Southern California. Buff started his own studio PAL in Cucamonga where he recorded bands including The Surfaris, Strawberry Alarm Clock and Frank Zappa. After starting Allison Research, Buff created the amazing Gain Brain compressor and later, at Valley People, he designed the equally extraordinary Dynamite. He also created & patented the Valley People TA-101 VCA which formed the basis of many of his designs
There are multiple versions of the Dynamite. The original Valley People Dynamite came in a 2-channel version in a beige plastic case and, later, in a 1U rack box with a black front panel and aluminium strips top & bottom. The Valley International Dynamite² is a version I’ve not seen before. This description will be updated as more information becomes available
The Dynamite has a huge reputation as a drum compressor. The reputation is well-founded – it excels at savage compression but still remains musical. It’s an ideal compressor for parallel compression – blending the compressed signal with the original gives the punch of the Dynamite along with the character of the original
Previous Dynamite versions used FETs, Paul Buff’s own TA-101 or other VCAs so the choice of the SSM2018 is interesting. The contemporary UREI 7110 used the SSM2014 to good effect. SSM VCAs were in the ADSR sections of many synthesisers and were the best VCA chips of the day
The Dynamite² is one of the middle iterations of the Dynamite line. It seems to share some features with the Valley People 610
Comments from the web on the various Dynamite models
“This is my favorite unit for gating, for squashed-with-a-sledgehammer limiting, and abusively loud sound”
“A bit hard to tame, but good for savage drum room compression”
“The dynamites sound cool on room mics, bottom snare, percussion, and various things needing squish, they are fast and tend to pull things up a bit, they sound fairly simalar, maybe the old ones are a tad more vibey…but ALL are cool. I have all three, and have resisted attempts to be parted from them…”
“When I want to slap those drums silly, the first place I reach is for a dyna-mite…. heh heh. Not a subtle compressor”
“I purchased one recently on sluts and have used it on tom group & electric guitar group… Recently it has stayed on my parallel drum group. it does something really cool in terms of smashing a kit. you can pull a lot of ambiance out of this box if you blend it just right with the rest of your kit mix”
“its a cool vibe piece if you like to smash things up”
“Yep. Not a lot of grace and subtlety to the VP dyna-mite. But it imparts a certain bigness – and has mojo in spades”
“the dyan-mite compressors are really cool, definitely adds snap to a week kick or snare, some times too much… I have also used mine on a guitar bus track”
“Never used the preamp but the compressor is spanking. Great drumsquasher!”
“we have some gain brains and they rock”
“the dynamites SPANK! Great for snares that you want brought into SUBMISSION!!!”
“Valley people ‘Transamp’ preamp modules kik ass.. pretty clean but punch like tyson!”
“the dyan-mite compressors are really cool, definitely adds snap to a weak kick or snare, some times too much… I have also used mine on a guitar bus track”
“wow. this thing is nuts. sooper fast attack. makes vocals stand up right in your face. you can make the attack of a snare inaudible”
“2 settings – smashed, and bypass”