The History of the Optical Compressor
The word “iconic” gets thrown around pretty loosely in the world of vintage pro audio, where nearly every analog dynamics processor made before 1979 is attended to like a holy relic. The Teletronix LA-2A Leveling Amplifier, however, has earned that title by appearing on thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, of iconic recordings, mostly on lead vocals, since its introduction in 1965. The LA-2A was built on the bones of an earlier design utilizing a unique optical attenuator created by Jim Lawrence, founder of the Teletronix Engineering Company. In the late 1950’s Lawrence wanted to build an audio “leveler” that would ride the gain automatically during radio broadcasts. An electrical engineer by trade, Jim developed optical sensors as a way of controlling the dynamics of an incoming audio signal, turning the dynamics of that signal into light, and using a light-sensitive receptor to control the gain; the greater the incoming signal, the brighter the light, the greater the compression. That was the birth of the T4 electro-optical cell. The natural ballistics of the luminescence being generated created a very smooth compression, soft-knee with a moderate attack and a slow decay. The first model was called the LA-1. The second edition, the LA-2, found its way into the studios of RCA and CBS, and the last and most famous iteration, the LA-2A, was released in 1965, when Lawrence sold Teletronix to Babcock Electronics. Babcock eventually sold Teletronix, with all of its designs and patents, to Bill Putnam's Studio Electronics Corp. (eventually renamed UREI), who continued to produce the LA-2A until 1969, when it was replaced by the LA-3A.
Bill Putnam’s company, UREI, introduced the LA-3A in 1969 as a replacement for the LA-2A. The new version was actually quite different in design and sound. While still using a version of Jim Lawrence’s original T4 electro-optical cell, now called the T4b, the solid-state LA-3A utilized components and topology borrowed from UREI’s successful 1176LN limiters. Designed by Bill Putnam and Brad Plunkett, who engineered the 1176LN, the 3U high, half rack LA-3A had much different ballistics than its predecessor. Most noticeably, its attack was dynamic, unlike the LA-2A’s fixed attack, and reacted to large transients with much faster attack times than smaller transients. From 1969 until 1981, when it was discontinued, the LA-3A became ubiquitous in recording studios and radio stations throughout the world. Some have even suggested that the compressed sound of FM radio in the 1970’s, a sound that so many artists strive for today, was due in large part to the use of LA-3As across the stereo feed.