by vermis_rex » Wed May 30, 2007 10:53 pm
You might try trawling through the back messages on one of the Yahoo! Groups, I think they have one for the older E-mu samplers.
In the mean time, I'll have a dig through me electronic collection of manuals and see if I can come up with any info for you... might take a few days, might not even yield any results, but it's a shot.
[edit, later that same evening]
OK, the first question is, "do you have the manual". If not, scoot on over to E-mu's web site and dig through the legacy hardware support to find a PDF copy of it (they only have one for the EIIIx, not the xs, but the only difference as far as I can tell is that the xs includes analog sampling inputs, while the x doesn't... oh, and to really confuse you, the EIIIx is sometimes referred to as the EIIIxp).
Second, what exactly do you mean by "make floppies"? Do you mean "how can I make some floppy discs of samples I've downloaded from the web on my computer so that the EIIIxs will read them". If so, the answer is, "you don't". As far as I know there's no utility available to write the proprietary E-mu format diskettes on a PC.
So, the only answer that matters is, "you get a floppy, put it in the EIIIxs, format it with the utility in the EIIIxs (see manual), sample something, and save it to the floppy". Or, get yourself a SCSI CD-ROM drive and throw the floppies out the window (there are plenty of EIIIx library CD-ROMs floating around out there).
As for "is this thing worth anything"... that's a largely subjective matter. As far as I know, those units still have a voltage controlled filter (read: analog!), which some people insist sounds much smoother and creamier than digital filters. But it's only a basic low-pass filter, so you don't get any of the funky filter models that were introduced in later E-mu products (though, those filter models are all digital filter stuff... if you want warm analog, low-pass is all you got). As vintage gear, it's worth "something" to anybody interested in vintage gear. To the average house-wife, the answer would be more like "isn't if sort of big for a paper-weight?"
What it comes down to is "do you like the sound"? In the end, that's all that matters (unless you're an obsessive history buff into the unit just for the "vintage gear" aroma/ambiance)