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Subject: Re: [yamahacs80] My own CS-80

From: Douglas Rodriguez <floobygoop@...>
Date: 2011-02-25

Csaba,
Thanks for the reply and sharing your advice.  Why should I replace components that seem to be working properly?  Is there any harm in waiting for something to break rather than "fix" it first?  What will happen if I don't?
Doug

--- On Sun, 2/20/11, Csaba Zvekan <czvekan@...> wrote:

From: Csaba Zvekan <czvekan@...>
Subject: Re: [yamahacs80] My own CS-80
To: yamahacs80@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, February 20, 2011, 5:57 AM

Hi Doug,

Long story short : if you are pretty good with the soldering iron I 
would start replacing the 4000 series CMOS chips , make sockets and 
put additional bypass capacitors. Replace systematically all 
capacitors starting with the power supply. That way you could rest  a 
sure that the Yamaha custom chips are a bit out of the danger zone.
How ever this is not a ten minutes job . Take your time as it is 
worth the work and effort. If you have questions we are glad to help 
you.

Kind Regards

Csaba Zvekan


On Feb 20, 2011, at 8:42 AM, effegee wrote:

> Hi. I'm new here. I just acquired a CS-80 that originally belonged 
> to Oscar Peterson, who sold it when he put together a Synclavier 
> system. The guy I bought it from has played on records for Bon 
> Jovi, Aerosmith, the Cult, Scorpions, etc. He had the CS-80 for 16 
> years, keeping it in the studio and storage, and never once had it 
> tuned. I'm amazed, because the tuning sounds great. There is one 
> dead (or barely audible) voice on Ch. I, but everything else seems 
> in working order, and it sounds great. This is the first CS-80 I've 
> ever played and I'm having fun exploring is sonic and expressive 
> possibilities. I'm planning on having a synth tech a few hours away 
> in Seattle work on the dead voice and tune it, and I'm looking at 
> having the Kenton MIDI installed (though I don't know how I feel 
> about drilling into the beautiful front panel to install switches-- 
> we'll see).
>
> I also own an Arp 2600, the internals of which I had overhauled by 
> an Arp specialist (Cirocco). When I go it, the Arp's enclosure was 
> so water damaged and the hinges & corners so rusted that I had to 
> have a new enclosure made for it. Fortunately I have a woodworking 
> friend who replicated the original enclosure out of plywood and I 
> tolexed it (using the old tolex as a pattern), and put on the 
> corner/hinges/handle hardware, hand-setting every rivet. That was a 
> huge, weeks-long project, but I learned a lot about tolex, rivets, 
> hard-to-find case hardware, and people that shamelessly lie to you 
> on eBay about what they're selling you. In the end, I have the most 
> mint (if not original) cases for an Arp 2600 in existence. If only 
> it could hold it's tuning as well as the CS-80…
>
> So, back to the CS-80: I'm somewhat concerned. With all of the 
> reading I've done here and on the net about replacing parts, etc., 
> I feel like I'm sitting on a time bomb. Is my CS-80 going to just 
> stop working one day? I understand that there are aging components, 
> but I don't know what I need to do right now for a unit that seems 
> to be functioning well. It seems that I should have the power 
> supply refurbished (Circuit Solutions kit) based on what others 
> have written, but what about the other stuff? Should I wait until 
> something breaks before I have it fixed? Or is there potential for 
> worse damage if I don't do something now? I want to do what's best, 
> yet avoid overkill.
>
> I'm glad to be here. Thanks for letting me share.
>
> Doug
>
>



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