AM 334-01-502
57
III. Peripheral PC Boards
In this chapter, we will consider PC boards which are not
directly involved in tone generation or processing but rather
serve as connection or interface points to the "'outside
world" (peripheral) devices such as the swell pedal, a
microphone, a tape recorder, headphones, M.I.D.I. or a
personal computer.
1. PCBoards CB24 and STl5
PC board CB 24 (Fig. 28) contains the interface circuitry for
the Musical Instrument Digital Interface (M.I.D.I.), R5232
(home computer) and the audio output. (The BETA CP has
the ST 15 instead of the CB 24). The M.I.D.I. function
allows 'the organ to exchange data with other organ models
or with other musical instruments which have M.I.D.I., a
standard interface.
The organ transmits keying and registration information via
"M.I.D.I. Out" jack, pin 5. The voltage which exists on pin 4
drives the LED in the optocoupler of the receiving device
(cf., "M.I.D.I. In" jack). The optocoupler assures complete
electrical isolation between the instruments. The received
data goes to the organ electronics via IC1 - The data from
the home computer passes to and from the organ electronics
via the RS232 connector -
On ST 15 (Fig. 29), the BETA CP's swell pedal connects to
the "Volume" jack. As explained under AF 12, the overall
volume of all the organ signals is controlled by a varying
control current from the swell pedal. Zero cur-rent means the
volume is down completely; increasing current (up to 0.6
mA) means increasing volume. The BETA CP is
transportable and the swell pedal is a separate unit. What do
you do if you have forgotten to bring the swell pedal? Well,
the ST 15 contains a missing swell pedal detection switch"
circuit that will save you from total embarrassment.
If nothing is connected to the "Volume" jack, QS is
nonconductive because its base is held virtually at emitter
potential by R22 and R24;this makes QS look like a high
resistance. In this case, R23 and D4 supply an auxilliary
current to the
1
abc line; this current goes to the AF 12 board,
maintaining the amplifiers at full volume.
If the swell pedal (PC board OS 1) is plugged in, the LED
current of the optocoupler (on O51) flows through P1, R3,
pin 4 of the jack and R24 on ST 15, causing a voltage drop
across R24 sufficient to turn on as. This biases D4 off,
stopping the auxiliary current. The swell pedal now has sole
control over the volume.
2. PC Boards MP 2 thru MP 6
These boards (Fig's 30 thru 34) contain the interfaces for
microphone, headphones and tape recorder. They differ by
organ model:
MP 2: DX 400 - Microphone amplifier
MP 3: DX 400 - Microphone connector panel
MP 4: DX 500 - Microphone amplifier and
connector panel
MP5:DX4OOCP - Microphone, tape volume
MP6:DX4OOCP - Headphone amplifier,
interface panel for tape
recorder and microphone
3. PC Boards TS Sand PA 10
The TS 5 triac switch and the PA 10 power amplifier are
both in the power chassis LE 30. The LE 30 also contains
the power transformer, which, along with the line voltage
components and wiring, is enclosed in a protective metal
cage.
a) Triac Switch (Fig. 35)
The line voltage c9mes in via the AC panel plug and goes
first through a noise/static suppressor. It then goes through
one of the two fuses, depending upon the line voltage being
wed, through the transformer primary winding and through
the triac switch.
The triac switch TS 5 is comparable to a relay: a low-level,
non-dangerous voltage is used to activate a relay, which then
switches through the high line voltage. In this way, the
operator is not exposed to the line voltage. In this case, triac
BT139 functions as an electronic relay. Its trigger voltage
comes from winding W2 of transformer NT1 -
Since NTI is permanently connected across the AC line via
R1, the triac is triggered on each half cycle of line voltage,
so that the circuit between pins 3 and 8(7) of PC board TS5
is continuously switched through. However, if winding W3
of NT1 (only a minute voltage is present here) is shorted out
by a closure across pins 9 and 10 of TS 5, there is no longer
any voltage on any of NT1's windings and the triac cannot
be triggered on. It can only be switched through again when
the short across W3---present when the organ's AC line
switch is closed-is removed. Hence the AC line switch
works just the reverse of the way a power switch normally
works: when it's closed, the organ is off; when it's open, the
organ is on!
Summary of Contents for DX 400
Page 1: ...AM 334 01 502 1 assembly manual Technical Data DX 400 500 AM 334 1st Edition ...
Page 2: ...AM 334 01 502 2 ...
Page 8: ...AM 334 01 502 8 Fig 3 Block diagram of the audio section ...
Page 10: ...AM 334 01 502 10 BACKPLANE BOARD MB 30 EDGE CONNECTOR PIN LAYOUT VIEWED FROM SIDE A ...
Page 11: ...AM 334 01 502 11 Backplahe board MB 30 plug layout ...
Page 13: ...AM 334 01 502 13 Fig 4 Plug in board PS 12 component layout and functions ...
Page 14: ...AM 334 01 502 14 Fig 5 Plug in board PS 12 schematic diagram ...
Page 16: ...AM 334 01 502 16 Fig 6 Plug in board AF 12 component layout and functions ...
Page 17: ...AM 334 01 502 17 This Page is Intentionally Blank ...
Page 18: ...AM 334 01 502 18 Fig 7 Plug in board AF 12 schematic diagram ...
Page 19: ...AM 334 01 502 19 ...
Page 21: ...AM 334 01 502 21 Fig 8 Plug in board DH 10 component layout and functions ...
Page 22: ...AM 334 01 502 22 Fig 9 Plug in board DH10 schematic diagram ...
Page 23: ...AM 334 01 502 23 ...
Page 25: ...AM 334 01 502 25 Fig 10 Plug in board EF 20 component layout and functions ...
Page 26: ...AM 334 01 502 26 Fig 11 Plug in board EF 20 schematic diagram ...
Page 27: ...AM 334 01 502 27 ...
Page 29: ...AM 334 01 502 29 Fig 12 Plug in board EF 19 component layout and functions ...
Page 30: ...AM 334 01 502 30 Fig 13 Plug in board EF19 schematic diagram ...
Page 31: ...AM 334 01 502 31 ...
Page 33: ...AM 334 01 502 33 Fig 14 Plug in board DDS 3 component layout and functions ...
Page 34: ...AM 334 01 502 34 Fig 15 Plug in board DDS3 schematic diagram ...
Page 35: ...AM 334 01 502 35 ...
Page 37: ...AM 334 01 502 37 Fig 16 Plug in board SL 3 component layout and functions ...
Page 38: ...AM 334 01 502 38 Fig 17 Plug in board SL3 schematic diagram ...
Page 39: ...AM 334 01 502 39 ...
Page 40: ...AM 334 01 502 40 Fig 18 Plug in board MST 3 component layout and functions ...
Page 41: ...AM 334 01 502 41 This Page is Intentionally Blank ...
Page 42: ...AM 334 01 502 42 Fig 19 Plug in board MST 3 schematic diagram ...
Page 43: ...AM 334 01 502 43 ...
Page 45: ...AM 334 01 502 45 Fig 20 Control boards CB 20 27 28 slide controls drawbars schematic diagram ...
Page 46: ...AM 334 01 502 46 Fig 21 Control board CB21 switches display schematic diagram ...
Page 47: ...AM 334 01 502 47 ...
Page 48: ...AM 334 01 502 48 Fig 22 Control board CB22 switches schematic diagram ...
Page 49: ...AM 334 01 502 49 ...
Page 50: ...AM 334 01 502 50 Fig 23 Control board CB 23 rhythm CX 4 schematic diagram ...
Page 51: ...AM 334 01 502 51 Fig 24 Control board CB 25 VCF Glide ...
Page 52: ...AM 334 01 502 52 Fig 25a Key contact board KD1 schematic diagram ...
Page 53: ...AM 334 01 502 53 ...
Page 54: ...AM 334 01 502 54 Fig 25b Key contact board KD1 schematic diagram b ...
Page 55: ...AM 334 01 502 55 Fig 26 Key contact board KD 2 schematic diagram DX 500 only ...
Page 56: ...AM 334 01 502 56 Fig 27 Key contact board KD4 schematic diagram DX400 only ...
Page 59: ...AM 334 01 502 59 Fig 28 Interface panel CB 24 MIDI circuits ...
Page 60: ...AM 334 01 502 60 Fig 29 Interface panel ST 15 schematic diagram BETA CP only ...
Page 61: ...AM 334 01 502 61 Fig 30 Microphone preamp MP 2 MP 3 BETA S and T only ...
Page 62: ...AM 334 01 502 62 Fig 31 Microphone preamp MP 2 BETA S and T only ...
Page 63: ...AM 334 01 502 63 Fig 32 Microphone preamp MP 4 DX 500 only ...
Page 64: ...AM 334 01 502 64 Fig 33 Microphone preamp MP 5 BETA CP only ...
Page 65: ...AM 334 01 502 65 Fig 34 Headphone amplifier NIP 6 BETA CP only ...
Page 66: ...AM 334 01 502 66 Fig 35 Triac switch TS 5 schematic diagram not in BETA CP ...
Page 67: ...AM 334 01 502 67 Fig 36 Power amplifier PA 10 schematic diagram not in BETA CP ...