Adrian Goodwin,

Working in reverse here.... 

Maas-Rowe has been in business since 1922.  The son of the founder of the 
company, Paul Rowe currently president of the company is his golden years.  

The DCB1 which was Maas-Rowe's first generation of a digital controller in 
around 1983 has Westminster chimes, bell tolls for churches, colleges and 
universities.  For instance, Angelus, De Profundis, Change Ringing (Bell 
Peals), Swinging Bell etc.  There were two other generations of this product 
which followed.  The DCBII and DCBIII.  All three units use an external bell 
chime unit with chromatically tuned bell rods with the additional partials 
needed ground into them.

Here is the external Bell Unit which can connect to a DCBI, DCBII or DCBIII. 
The Bell unit contains 15 bell rods, and they are divided up into the Low C 
chord of 3-bells. The rest are divided up into groups of 2-bells.

Maas-Rowe carillon: Close-up of the chimes inside the California Tower at 
Balboa Park in San Diego

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3TnjL_nVz0

The DCBI used 8-track cartridge tapes for the musical selections.  The DCBII 
(discontinued) and DCB3 use a 7 or 25 disc Compact Disk Mechanism for the 
musical selections.  

Maas-Rowe Digital Chronobell demo at First UMC, Benton, Arkansas

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PV5fZhTbfoM

Six years ago Maas-Rowe Developed a Digital Sequencer unit which contains up to 
25 "Libraries" of musical selections. It also contains the 7 bell voices which 
Maas-Rowe patented played in "real time" from digital samples.

Seen here:

Digital Carillon Player (DCP) Introduction  (Attached to a DCBIII).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GUM062-eCoM

In addition Maas-Rowe has manufactured for several decades what is referred to 
as the Grand Symphonic Carillon.  It allows you to play from a keyboard 
console, and it also can contain their MPR1 and MPR2 unit which has musical 
selection storage and a sequencer.

A sample of The Grand Symphonic Carillon can be seen here:

Game of Thrones Theme - Balboa Park Carillon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EAiKcL7yGc0

Here is another demonstration of The Grand Symphonic Carillon

Carillon Bells ASU MCC collaboration
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cZoMDxPpGyI

The latest model is the Bell Whether Carillon 

Maas-Rowe Carillons Bellwether
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4DDehZRR3ks

Sorry you asked? 😉


Donald R. Resor Jr. T. W. & T. C. Svc. Co.
http://hammondorganservice.com
Hammond USA warranty service
"Most people don’t have a sense of humor. They think they do, but they don’t." 
--Jonathan Winters






-----Original Message-----
From: time-nuts <time-nuts-boun...@febo.com> On Behalf Of Adrian Godwin
Sent: Sunday, March 04, 2018 3:25 PM
To: Tom Van Baak <t...@leapsecond.com>; Discussion of precise time and 
frequency measurement <time-nuts@febo.com>
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] WWV or Net Clock controlled oscillator

Donald,

I'm interested to hear more about the Maas-Rowe controller. I presume something 
that plays a fixed peal on the chimes ?

I found another You-tube video where someone was describing a set of chimes, 
but it had a tube amplifier and a small manual keyboard. He didn't describe any 
sort of automatic player, and from the age of the system I would imagine it 
would have been semi-mechanical, like a player piano.


How does the controller you  are restoring operate ?



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