> I have tried plugging into all the outputs and get absolutely > no sound. Do you think it's likely that the capacitors on the > power supply are shot? Probably the power supply, but not necesarily the caps. (It's fashionable at the moment to blame the caps whenever anything dies, but they don't fail dead short all that often.) You say it "powers up". Do you mean the mains lamp comes on, or is there any other sign of life? I don't have a 100 or a 100 schematic, but if the 101 and 100 power supplies are similar, the mains neon is after the fuse and mains switch. (Check that the fuse is the correct value - people often stick a bigger fuse in when one blows, and blow something serious up instead. Should probably be 1/4A slow blow, and certainly not greater than 1A.) Have you tried to measure the power supply? I assume it should give +15v/-15v like the 101, or at least something similar. If you can't measure anything out of the power supply, check that one side of the mains transformer has mains and the other side has two lots of approx 18v AC. WARNING - IF YOU ARE UNSURE OF YOUR ABILITY TO WORK SAFELY AROUND EXPOSED MAINS, DON'T DO IT. No synth is worth dying for. Not even an EML100. If you have 18v AC but no 15v, measure the voltage across each of the power supply caps. They should each have around 25v DC across them. If there is little or no voltage across the caps, they could have died, or the rectifier diodes could have died, or both. If you have a healthy voltage across the caps but no +15v/-15v, either the voltage regulators have died or something has gone short across the power supply. You could switch it off and measure for shorts on the output wires from the power supply to the rest of the synths boards. If you do find a short, you'll have to disconnect each board in turn too find which one (or ones) is/are causing the short. Good luck! Steve
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RE: [emlsynth] EML 100
2008-02-06 by Steve Ridley
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