Wednesday, 10 July 2013

panel 1

Almost ready for final testing
A few broken wires and lifted pads on the 101 and 104 boards took some sorting.
Replaced most of the caps, new (and slightly overkill) power wires and a CGS power distro board.
Dog approves




Saturday, 29 June 2013

Additive Programmers 3

The DM7406 chips all tested fine, so decided to simply rebuild the boards. The vero-board has two additive programmers and a hi-gain pre-amp. Nearly finished wiring it up (only about 80 wires involved).


MC1494 Ring Modulator

This PCB pretty much follows the test circuit given in the datasheet, although I'd like to know where it came from. Please add a comment if you know - thanks.
It has not been tested yet. If the chip is okay, the components will get a makeover. If the chip is dead, the board will be replaced by an early Serge RM, as 1494s are a bit rare now.
see below for updates








Dave Jones of http://www.jonesvideo.com/ kindly gave me a bit of info on these - "The chips are dated late 1971 and early 1972. Allowing for time in the supply chain the board is still probably from the early 70s (1972/73).

The op amp might be an industrial part numbered UA741. (metal can pin numbers are the same as MC1456, but the marking contains 741 in it)

The board is virtually identical to the "typical" diagram from the data sheet. Right down to the trimpot I crossed out (board was laid out for it, but it was jumpered out).

The board has a spot for a pair of zeners that are independent of the rest of the circuit, except for one leg going to ground. But those parts aren't installed."



Serge TKB

This took a bit of poking and prodding to get running again, the main problem turned out to be a semi-dead inverter chip.
Found some interesting mods on the PCB, not sure if this was due to an error with the PCB layout or the connector:



Quad Pan 104A & Quad VCA 101A



























Monday, 17 June 2013

Additive Programmers 2

Stripped and ready for rewiring
Despite instructions not to clean the front of the panel, I just had to get the knobs off and clean away the genuine 70s fluff and dust........sorry Jono



Tuesday, 4 June 2013

Additive Programmers

These are very interesting circuits, they mix CVs and produce arrays of triggers in reponse to changes in the CVs.
Each programmer contains two circuits: a non-inverting summer and a trigger generator which produces triggers as the CVs on the inputs cross the threshold of the inverters. The main chips are the long obsolete DM7406 which have open collector outputs that are quite suited to the circuit. This circuit is likely easy enough to build with a CMOS 4069 with a few resistor value changes.
There are a number of broken wires and the circuits are looking a bit grotty, most likely the easiest solution will be to rebuild these from scratch.






edit - updated schematic (was missing a resistor)