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PPG Wave 2.3 Service Manual

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
165 views38 pages

PPG Wave 2.3 Service Manual

Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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PPE Service Manual INTRODUCTION This Service Manual has been put together to enable you to give your customer fast and dependable service with a mimmum of difficulties for yourself. The reason you wil! be able to service this machine so efficiently is because all really time consuming problems that can tum up will probably be located on one of the two digital boards (I/O or Prozboard). These boards are so incredibly complex thal. apan from very few exceptions. have to be swapped if something goes wrong with them. The macnine 1s a fully digital synthesize: with analog filters All ts funcuons «eg wave. form processing and sound modilicaon) are controlled and executed py a < : What makes the WAVE what iis are the four boards plugged into the mothersoard The heart of the machine is the CPU 6809 which is located on the 1/0 BOARD. Its intelh- gence (the machine program) 1s stored in four 2764 E-PROMS. They are plugged into sockets on the I/O BOARD and labeled 8. A. C. E. These are the E-PROMS that are ex: changed in the event of a SOFTWARE UPDATE. Next to them you find the 2 E-PROMS labeled 4 and 6 which contains the WAVEFORM DATA The following manual should be sufficient help for you to restore a PPG WAVE to 1s nor- mal working condition SOUND MISTAKES In general there are two different kinds of sound mistakes that can arise in the PPG WAVE 2.3. a) Mistakes that occur in the computer. ) Mistakes that occur because of a defect in one of the 8 digital dual oscillators. Here is a relatively easy test to determine which case is at hand: —Tum on the machine and find a suitable sound in keyboard mode 0 ~—Press a key and hold it to determine if the sound is alright. — After the keyboard has ‘been turned on oscillator No. 1 is acuvated as soon as a key is pressed. Releasing the key and pressing it a second time activates oscillator No. 2. This makes it possible to step through the 8 oscillators one after the other. —If the sound mistakes can be heard in regular intervals, (every eight ume the key is Pressed) the problem is probably a defect in one of the oscillators. —TIf the mistake arises erratically it is usually a mistake in the computer. A third problem can come from sounds that the customer has created himself. Certain natural electro acoustic effects (e.g. the modulation of certain parameter) can cause sound distortions that are than attributed to a defect in the synthesizer. There are two ways to determine whether this is the case: a) Load the factory sounds from tape into the WAVE, b) Load the customer's sounds into a different WAVE and compare them to each other. VARIOUS COMPONENTS OF THE WAVE 2.3/2.2 1) Power supply The power supply consists of a transformer with an input of 220 V or 110 V (depending on the switch on the back panel) and outputs of 2 x 15 V with a common ground lead and a lx 10V secondary. These a.c.'s are converted to the following d.c.'s. +12V, -12V and +SV. The voltage controllers 7812 and 7912 are on the mother board, 78HOS is mounted on the back panel The $V are converted tc a higher voltage for the LCD. This current is an alternaung current 2) Analeg pane! On the analog pane! boars are ne corresponding pots and an mpx circuit Not on the boar me Oo = io = ~ © ° @Q: & Proz. Board 2.3 so}auv0g, snq"woy Vid snq-woo 1 44.089 0} 1! oBueyoxe 49086 s} soWoRdeg SIM) II 1suo1u0}SIg 40 & sinodosg - punog seinBony BW ‘S¥NVE Wd - GNNOS Gri axoriva z = net coy ae oP o] S40 fe < soe Ty ~_HSF¥d2N. ha-ro'Ly 83 Zaud ae eyey paver Oct H 1eWWLIM blo sey ae l! tai i sate WYY me)NOL LSZONG yruemer avo? suave) pa? €ca mf — re syne 2707 pe 6er/eek HVT e-pwvd 83m aha hae wwe Sv paw 200 SYD yao? 4p S20 00. ‘orxoziwa hO*bO%ee cee INOUINFLS = ZOAd ce C> OF 4 12 Bit espera ——aperay Perera by the metal framework touching the solder point please cut the circuit line to prevent a short circuit which can be caused onthe component side of the board asia Heh 97 5 ? aa hr vig i). tne id He . Guid 94% Wa SED @ ir a Nd Soa ee aa we “Wa arin PO ‘ aly See tii “peg ganeee oxo mg tema. ott : arth Wd on 8 we bp tg . y BIH nvid Se r re rie Past a ml ae 7 (rerve9 Stpmayy som) tee we yanwact vove Wwilttef nny anglS-NMd : J TAIT caer ‘i : A) W a : “hh BBN " phe ee af wpa Syaee : . HN yuner i naa ¥ aecaspy WY 9s3pn. ri Teepe ard te ba Toa ak ane Wa s07 & nN 8 Oi: a. Rew! t _ eos “Dyyz | b3*ya'ee oo ¢ opts Zoplos — sous] oz pox = Faas ae ° 2 1 fea mu 4 fax z +. eee = 7 = » a Pap ee ELE et — 4 one ‘| =the amen [%e) a i 4 aN ss J : P yl fa “ S lua = ti \ js Sab i = ] as ore ca Tonlceriiconll: S51 (Po (2 9° 20" duvod 21 —% dO SSS “ISS Guvoa ZOIOA Zt/740 KvuoviaNo078 7 2 ae | Wa (pseog 2191) 4 40 tea eo ABE pel] RE wa AR} 8 AL yen OF 4 (Voice Board) C\. Processors 28 CUWOd UAHLOW 22 FAWN GuwoOd UFHLOW €'2 JAWM SSS GSS —O/:—*AGIW "ISS @W NO SiinouIo CASSETTE - rearace ae cur eTaOKOME 7 19-oma 3 Es mn cata ran conway WERR BES GW U0 0/F INAS Y3ZNAM03S @ cor ad y bor MxO0TO 1X3 -g 41n0 30979E OLS, + 100 tL ws wateruzee [ natwerecee on/ort TRANSPORMER High Volt. for Dispiay Ligne 1a +50 regul. ee “yay @ POWERSUPPLY POWER SUPPLY PART LIST Mainfilter Fuse 1A Fuse 0,5 On = Off Switch 220 V/110 V Switch ‘Transformer Rectifier +/-12V Capacitor 1000 uF/40 V Voltage Regulator 7812 Voltage Regulator 7912 Rectifier +5V Capacitor 1000 uF 16 V Voltage Regulator 7805 Display Transformer Complete +8V/Display Transformer Board (including 7808) Order No. PS — 301 PS — 302 PS — 303 PS — 304 PS — 305 PS — 306 PS — 307 PS — 308 PS — 309 PS — 310 PS — 311 PS — 312 PS - 313 PS — 314 PS — 333 PCB: "MB" to "1/0" CONNECTOR A +12V +12V GND GND -lVv -12V BOSX - BOAX Box P80 via Metronom push under Bl via Cassette Interface Clock C2 Timer Dyn Sensor in Ext start Sequencer CA2 via Reset Sequencer CV OUT - VCF CV OUT — VCA PBT VIA Footswitch—Program Mod Wheel CV In C1 Timer Clock divider (1/3) In 03 Timer Sequence Clock Ext CV In CAl PIA Sequencer Syne PBS VIA Trigger Out GND CV in CB2 VIA Cassette-Interface seriell DATA /0 PB4 VIA Cassette-Interface enable PB VIA Sustain Pg VIA Trigger In GND CVn PCB "MB" to "1/0" CONNECTOR B 1 Ao ‘MPU-Adress Bus 2 inte a 3 A 2 a 4 A3 a 5 A4 : 6 AS a 7 A 6 4 8 Al q 9 A.B : 10 Ag n A110 . 12 All : 13 Az . 14 AB . 18 Als . 16 AXS . Ww Do Data Bus 18 Di . 19 D2 . 20 D3 . 21 D4 . 22 D5 . 23 D6 = 24 Daa = 25 FRO 26 RO 27 E (02) 28 RES 29 RW 30 +5V CLock INTERFacS {Cassette INTERFACE : [cDIN WIRING Dragaan DIN WIRING DIAGRAM “ROUND EIGHT SWITCH soaRD fei “FOUR SWITCH BOARD *

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