I have a bunch of vintage gear in my gig rack, including a Matrix
1000, MKS-70, Yamaha TX802. When we did a big gig with a concert PA
for the first time, the sound guy had to put a noise gate on the mix
out. I hardly noticed it before because my club PA didn't have nearly
as much gain. "Old school gear is noisy" the sound guy said, "but it
sounds awesome."
Stublito
Quoting les_lmbrt <
les_lmbrt@...
>:
> It doesn't seem likely from what you say. that there is anything you
> can or should do to the insides of your Matrix. The change of mixer
> may mean you've changed the gain structure in this part of your
> setup, possibly the impedances are altered too.
> Try comparisons with another one first, it may be normal behaviour
> in ths new setup, it may be some grounding issue within the Matrix,
> or a factory mod that hasn't been carried out correctly, or at all.
> The leaking of generator noise is a feature of the Hammond by the
> way, we all love it, but some are worse than others, nobody persues
> this.
> If you're determined to have a look, look for signs of poor
> connections to ground, have a look at the schematic, look at how
> many connections to ground there are and consider how the noise
> might be re-entering the audio circuits before you get the thing open.
> This capacitor replacement fetish does have a basis in fact, old
> analog equipment tends to heat capacitors up, and modern equipment
> has in some cases been built with caps that don't quite do what it
> says on the tin for quite as long as we'd hoped. Substitution of
> parts often helps, but it's not where you start.
>
> Unless your standard of workmanship is very high, and you're very
> careful and well organised, you're quite likely to lose what you
> have, a working keyboard, and gain a large bill for a much more
> serious repair.
> The Matrix may or may not have a fault but I believe it's like your
> car, you need to take it to an experienced person. If you're lucky
> enough to find one.
> The techniques required for repairs to synths are not something
> you're likely to find by accident and enthusiasm.
> In the days of point to point wired hand made guitar amps, there was
> a chance to learn by doing without too much chance of doing damage,
> but the Matrix isn't that kind of animal.
> Trying to fix it by guesswork, even communal guesswork with well
> meaning helpers, does sometimes work, but if it has a proper fault a
> proper repair is what it needs. I understand these talented repair
> people are hard to find, but the more people that make the effort to
> look for them and share their positive experiences, the more
> technical support people will stay in the business.
>
> On a more cosmic level:
> To get the answer, we must formulate the question.
> Electronics fault finding is a What question, not a Why question.
>
> Often the fault is something minor or imaginary,and with the casting
> of a professional eye you might get news of some impending disaster
> that will save you a small fortune, the rattling noise that's the
> mains transformer colliding with the main processing board after the
> bolts sheared off for example.
>
> Turning up the drums isn't that bad an idea too.
>
> --- In
oberheim@yahoogroups.com
, "eightiescrisis" <eightiescrisis@...> wrote:
>>
>> Recently upgraded my mixer, and now I notice my Matrix 6R is fairly
>> noisy. It seems to have a low level noise and synth rumble on all
>> the patches. What's unique is that the sound changes from patch
>> to patch, but is always there. You can here it when the synth is
>> not being played, and I've even removed the midi cable, and turned
>> everything else off, just the module and the mixer........
>>
>> I guess I could turn the main volume down on the unit, but is there
>> something else I could do
>>
>>
>> Should I replace the caps, and where are they and what do they look like
>>
>> Is this common
>>
>
>
>
>
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