A few days ago I wanted to lower the temperature of the rectifier but it was too hot for me to touch it, so I thought I could put a cooling fan on the vacant C6 socket, as I don't know the voltage very well the fan spun quite fast causing me to be a bit scared, after 1 second it stopped spinning, when I connected the fan again the fan stopped responding ........ Finally, I noticed that the relay no longer sounded when I turned it on and the buttons were silent. I thought the relay had burned out, so I violently removed the cover of the relay with pliers, but then I suddenly realized that the two 0.75A fuses on the DC power board had blown. I replaced the fuses and everything was back to normal. Now my relay has no cover and the cover is damaged. You can check the fuses.
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Dear All World Class Musicians Owners of DX7
I have one DX7 Keyboard that was off the power grid for more than 5 years.
Switched On all functions appear normally on the screen
Sound ....none ......is it the battery ofr anything else, [pls help.
Else the unit is physically perfect solid state .
Please advise on precautions and tips to make it work like in the 80's .
Many Thanks to all of you,
With kind regards,
Raj?
Mauritius
On Thursday, April 18, 2024 at 05:38:16 AM GMT+4, Daniel Forró via <danforcz=
[email protected]> wrote:
Yes, this is general fact. But I suppose he wants to know the relation between DX7 parameter value and BPM, Hz, msec. Here is a table…
Daniel Forró
LFO is measured in cycles per second (Hz).
60 seconds in a minute, so:
One? cycle per second (Hz) = 60 BPM
Therefore LFO x 60 = BPM
BPM/60 = LFO Hz
120BPM/60 = 2hz?
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Hi Martin,
I can not find the file with the LFO speed BPM relation. Would it be possible to re send it or send a link or something? It would be really helpful. Thanks a lot in advance!!?