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Florian,
We appear to be getting terminology confused with each other.
The JX-3P uses digital CONTROL, but its actual sound generation is analogue (oscillators, amplifier, filter, chorus). I believe the envelopes are software generated. Many people incorrectly state that the 3P is a digital synthesizer, when it's actually analogue with digital control circuits.
A Yamaha DX7, Casio CZ and Roland D50 are fully digital, and use "digital oscillators", entirely different to "digitally CONTROLLED oscillators" as per the 3P. Many times I see the 3P incorrectly described as having digital oscillators or being described as a digital synth. A digital oscillator requires a digital to analogue converter to convert digital data to analogue audio, much the same way that a CD player uses D/A converters to convert digital information on the disc to analogue audio where it can be heard with the human ear.
This is what I took the OP's post to imply when he talked about D/A converters being faulty, because if it were a fully digital synth, then that would explain the loss of all audio. With the 3P, that wouldn't apply because of the 3P's analogue signal path. If the OP was talking about the 3P's digital control circuits with the digitally controlled oscillators, then my original comment wouldn't apply.I guess half the problem with many people's misunderstanding of the 3P, along with other DCO synths, is that they take a hybrid approach by mixing digital technology with analogue sound production. The lines get even more blurred when you bring in the likes of the Korg DW series, which flips things over by using digital waveforms for fully digital sound generation, and then using analogue filters and amps!
Hopefully the OP's problem was solved simply by changing the internal key velocity parameter!
On Tue, May 1, 2018, 5:39 AM Florian Anwander fanwander@... [kiwitechnics] < kiwitechnics@yahoogroups.com > wrote:
Hello Chas
On 01.05.18 01:43 , Chas D 350ypvs@... [kiwitechnics] wrote:You can rule out a digital to analogue converterThough I think, that the OP has different problem: That is not true. The D/A-converter provides everything for the sound control. For example the envelope for the VCA. If the D/A is broken, then there is no envelope or gate for the VCA and so there would be no sound.
Florian