This rare drawbar organ sold for £350 on Ebay recently. It's a Crumar T2 Organizer from 1978, featuring decent Hammond sounds, two long and light actioned keyboards and an extra long 18 note pedalboard. Apparently they're pretty good live instruments, and several players swear by them.
Hy there!
I need an electric connection diagramm of this OT2.
Mine isn't working!!!!
PLEASE HELP ME!!!!!!!!
Greetings from Austria!!
Posted by: Andrew | February 23, 2007 at 10:10 PM
Hi I just bought a T2 but needs a good revision. Is there anyone who can send me electric ans schematics diagrams?
many thanks
nice holidays!!!
Posted by: Paolo Garlaschè | December 28, 2009 at 03:41 PM
Hi, I have an electric diagramm of the crumar T 2. My own crumar has some technical problems, can anybudy help me?
Greetings vom Vienna
Hermann
Posted by: Hermann Fröschl | November 12, 2010 at 02:09 PM
Hermann. Do you have Organizer 2 or the T2?
Posted by: Peter | November 18, 2010 at 10:26 PM
Necesitaría diagramas electricos de CRUMAR T2
ORGANIZER. GRACIAS
Posted by: Guillermo r. Souto | May 09, 2011 at 03:18 AM
POR FAVOR NECESITARIA DIAGRAMAS COMPLETOS Y PLANOS ELECTRICOS DEL ORGANO CRUMAR T2 ORGANIZER.GRACIAS
Posted by: Guillermo r. Souto | May 09, 2011 at 03:23 AM
have sombody electrical sheme for CRUMAR T2 organizer ???
Posted by: boro | June 10, 2011 at 07:35 AM
I had a T2 back in the late 70s-early 80s. Ran it through a Leslie combo preamp and an old model 45 (not 145) leslie. I think the footpedals were optional because mine didn't have them, and I bought it new. I actually liked the sound better than the B2/122 combination that I replaced it with. What I didn't like was that I couldn't keep it working! The whole thing would just shut off (or not turn on). If I slapped it REAL HARD on the bottom it would sometimes turn back on. The dealer (service dept) couldn't find the problem, Crumar couldn't find the problem and 3 TIMES(!) they "replaced everything that could possibly cause the problem" under warranty. Once the warranty ran out I was out of luck. Finally traded it in on a Roland synth (it actually turned on and worked when I traded it in, and I'd gotten the B2 by then). I heard a couple of years later (don't know if it is true) that the problem with those organs is that the main circuit board was not properly supported, allowing it to flex when the organ was moved, which caused cracks in some of the traces on the board, which then caused intermittent loss of continuity (and is a pain in the a** to find) BTW - having that pitch-bend lever on an organ around 1980 was just too cool!
Posted by: Tom | August 13, 2011 at 06:52 AM