Hi Duncan, Thanks for the feedback. I also heard that replacing the trim pots is the first thing to try. So I will try this. I've been told that cerment track type trim pots are what to use. If the trim pot is not the trick then also the replacement of any surrounding compontents of the trim pots that are out of range should help. Then I was advised to replace the tantal and electrolytic capacitors of the power supply as a preventative service measure. There is a component in the Micromoog for temp comp. I will look at replacing it a as well. Overall my Micromoog is stable. I does not go way out of tune or change much. I can get one or two lower octaves in tune (and they stay in tune). But I can't get beyond that...(upper octaves in tune). So I will give these tips a try. I'm confident one of the above repairs will be the solution :) Br Allan --- In vintagesynthrepair@yahoogroups.com, "duncan" <ferrograph@...> wrote: > > >>I run out of adjustment with the OSC HI trimpot. I've played around > with adjusting the OSC RANGE and OSC HI trimpots but again I run out > of adjustment.<< > > Allan, > > it's a long shot- I only really know the later models (rogue, prodigy > & source, & of course my beloved LAMM memorymoog) but: > > is there a component in the vicinity of the oscillator that's supposed > to track temperature changes? > I once had a korg mono/poly in bits, & each of the four SSM oscillator > chips had a thermistor badly glued to it's top surface. the idea was > to temperature-compensate the IC, but it fails rather spectacularly if > the thermal device & the chip aren't properly coupled. > this can happen when the glue goes brittle & cracks, leaving you with > an air-gap & no temp-comp. good temperature compensation is essential > for accurate V>Hz tracking at the higher frequencies, though the > errors can go un-noticed below 1000Hz or so. > > there may be the vaguest reference to it on the schemo- as I recall, > it's a regular old-school resistor symbol (zigzag) with a dot next to > it & a circle round the whole lot. I may be wrong on this... but in > any case, the actual object is likely to be quite obvious on the PCB. > > hth- > duncan. >
Message
Re: MICROMOOG: Tuning and Repair (Advice Needed)
2007-05-24 by mlcsixand78s
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.