23 September 2014

Roland MKS-30 modification

I intend on getting a Kiwitechnics patch editor at some point, but the latest revision of it no longer supports emulation of the Roland PG-200 programmer, so cannot control a stock MKS-30. I believe the MKS-30 was the first MIDI module produced and it's MIDI implementation is severely limited - basically note on/off, no sysex or CC. The only way to backup patches is with an expensive and rare memory cartridge. Editing via the front panel is a painful process and the original PG-200 programmers go for as much as the synth itself, but thankfully Johannes Hausensteiner came up with a rewritten firmware and minor hardware modification that allows saving and loading patches over MIDI as well as realtime control. There is also a mod to control the speed of the chorus at the expense of being able to adjust the high pass filter, but I decided to forgo this.

Lid removed to expose the guts of the MKS-30. The mod comprises a replacement EPROM and a single wire from pin 12 of IC 40 on the main board to R12 on the chorus/PSU board.

Closeup of the main board changes. Rather than solder directly to the IC pin, I used a Molex connector so that the boards can be separated easily when I inevitably have to replace the VCF/VCA ICs. There are two conveniently positioned vias here with the right pitch for a 2.54mm header.

The other end of the wire. R12 is disconnected from the MIDI in circuitry and the free end connected to the wire, gunked down with silicon to stop it wandering. This turns the MIDI thru port into a MIDI out.

The infamous Roland 80017A filter/amp hybrids. Two of them have failed in my Juno 106 and it is only a matter of time before these fail too.

Replacement battery installed last week.
In other news, the intermittent front panel button (MIDI channel) is now behaving itself after some massaging. I haven't taken the panel board out to have a look, but I now believe these to be the same as the tact switches in the Jupiter 6, i.e. totally unobtainable.

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