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pax-eterna.1 Senior Member
Joined: 03 May 2017 Posts: 393
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Posted: Sun Jan 22, 2023 12:38 am Post subject: Original M3 OS needed... |
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So we all know the OS for the M3 is stored on an SD card inside the machine.
I have an issue with eh damper jack in that it is not working correctly. I have checked all cable connections inside and all PCBs and daughter boards are all firmly connected.
The other jacks on that connector board all work fine, it's juts the damper, which is leading me to believe that it maybe an OS thing.
It is running the latest 2.05 however I cannot downgrade the OS via usual means , nor will it allow me to re-install the latest OS, so I was thinking if I remove the SD Card and manually reload it with the original OS and then re-install each successive update it might just fix the issue.
As I wrote all physical connectors are firm and there are no other issues.
Can anyone point me in the right direction here please? I've been to Korg Downloads, but I can find no info on actually downgrading the OS. |
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voip Platinum Member
Joined: 27 Nov 2014 Posts: 3784
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Posted: Sun Jan 22, 2023 9:05 pm Post subject: |
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Has the damper pedal been checked with a multimeter, just to check that the contacts are closing properly.
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pax-eterna.1 Senior Member
Joined: 03 May 2017 Posts: 393
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Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2023 1:18 am Post subject: |
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voip wrote: | Has the damper pedal been checked with a multimeter, just to check that the contacts are closing properly.
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Thanks for the reply. Yes I've tried a couple of different units and all have the same result.
Not sure there's a real need to check with a MM, if the pedals are working fine with other equipment. |
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voip Platinum Member
Joined: 27 Nov 2014 Posts: 3784
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Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2023 10:49 am Post subject: |
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A multimeter, using the resistance measurement function, would help to give some idea of how "good" the Damper pedal contact closure was, which might have an impact on detection of pedal operation by the M3. The other thing that could be tested is the presence of the "sense" voltage on the damper jack, by plugging in a TR cable, or an unwired jack plug, into the Damper jack socket on the M3, and measuring the voltage at the end of the cable, or on the plug contacts. It should be around 3.3 Volts. If 3.3 Volts is not present, then this needs to be investigated. Shorting the other end of the TR cable, or the jack plug contacts would simulate damper pedal operation.
A software issue seems unlikely, though not impossible. The device that senses the Damper pedal operation is also responsible for the Pedal input, and the rotary encoder, and the Tempo button. If those are working correctly, then it suggests that the OS is able to get data from the device.
If you still want to go down the OS route, this link may help:
http://i.korg.com/SupportPage.aspx?productid=280
Note the warning from Korg about downgrading the OS: "Warning: DO NOT attempt to downgrade your OS from 2.0 to 1.2 or earlier – this is not supported and will render your M3 inoperable without help from your local Distributor and Korg Inc.".
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pax-eterna.1 Senior Member
Joined: 03 May 2017 Posts: 393
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Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2023 8:34 pm Post subject: |
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voip wrote: | A multimeter, using the resistance measurement function, would help to give some idea of how "good" the Damper pedal contact closure was, which might have an impact on detection of pedal operation by the M3. The other thing that could be tested is the presence of the "sense" voltage on the damper jack, by plugging in a TR cable, or an unwired jack plug, into the Damper jack socket on the M3, and measuring the voltage at the end of the cable, or on the plug contacts. It should be around 3.3 Volts. If 3.3 Volts is not present, then this needs to be investigated. Shorting the other end of the TR cable, or the jack plug contacts would simulate damper pedal operation.
A software issue seems unlikely, though not impossible. The device that senses the Damper pedal operation is also responsible for the Pedal input, and the rotary encoder, and the Tempo button. If those are working correctly, then it suggests that the OS is able to get data from the device.
If you still want to go down the OS route, this link may help:
http://i.korg.com/SupportPage.aspx?productid=280
Note the warning from Korg about downgrading the OS: "Warning: DO NOT attempt to downgrade your OS from 2.0 to 1.2 or earlier – this is not supported and will render your M3 inoperable without help from your local Distributor and Korg Inc.".
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Thanks - yes I'd only be wanting to drop back to 2, or perhaps just before that.
The actual thing happening is that when a pedal is connected to the damper jack, when I press it and try to play a note I get no sound, if I hold the pedal and the play a note it sustains indefinitely. It's almost like it is seeing the damper jack as a continuous (ie expression) input. |
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HardSync Platinum Member
Joined: 07 Jan 2011 Posts: 794
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Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2023 8:55 pm Post subject: |
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At the risk of being ignored once again, there is an easy way on the M3 to see to exactly what your damper pedal is doing electrically. No mulitmeter required.
Go into SEQ mode, start recording a song, press damper pedal a few times. Then go into Event Edit and look at the CC data. Damper is CC64. |
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voip Platinum Member
Joined: 27 Nov 2014 Posts: 3784
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Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2023 10:28 pm Post subject: |
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It is worth bearing in mind that there are several steps involved between the damper pedal contacts closing and the generation of CC64 MIDI messages. If the CC64 messages are present in the SEQ mode recording, that would indicate that the sequence of events is intact. If there are no CC64 messages generated, it doesn't exactly tell us where the issue lies, just that the sequence of events is broken somewhere. It is but one piece of evidence in the diagnostics procedure to follow.
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HardSync Platinum Member
Joined: 07 Jan 2011 Posts: 794
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Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2023 11:33 pm Post subject: |
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True, but it's not meant to be comprehensive troubleshooting. It's meant for those who can't troubleshoot anything electronic, don't have meters, etc. Will also give us an idea as to what the actual problem may be. I doubt it's an OS thing. More likely culprit is the pedal itself, perhaps a compatibility issue, or maybe even a polarity setting in global. Literally don't have enough info to work with to diagnose the actual issue. |
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pax-eterna.1 Senior Member
Joined: 03 May 2017 Posts: 393
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Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2023 3:44 pm Post subject: |
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I have the Korg Proprietary pedal, a Roland Pedal a Studiologic pedal, several generic pedals and Roland FS-5 pedals/
All exhibit the exact same behavior in the damper jack.
All work 100% on other devices.
@ hardsync - sorry but ignored again? That was your first post on this thread??
FWIW, I do have a MM, and I do know how to test gear, and these pedals are all fine.
I will however check in the SEQ mode to see exactly what this jack is interpreting the pedal messages as though, good tip! |
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HardSync Platinum Member
Joined: 07 Jan 2011 Posts: 794
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Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2023 9:13 pm Post subject: |
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pax-eterna.1 wrote: | @ hardsync - sorry but ignored again? That was your first post on this thread??
FWIW, I do have a MM, and I do know how to test gear, and these pedals are all fine.
I will however check in the SEQ mode to see exactly what this jack is interpreting the pedal messages as though, good tip! |
I wasn't referring to this thread. I had answered several of your posts from last September without acknowledgment. Unfortunately, a lack of acknowledgment is rather common on these forums, and after twelve years of that happening, it remains one of my peeves. I'm just drama queening it... as I'm wont to do.
So I troubleshoot electronic and electrical equipment for my job. One thing I do know is that the physical appearances of components and/or cable connectors making good contact are sometimes not reliable indicators of whether a component on a PCB or perhaps the cabling between PCBs is bad.
In this case, it could be a the damper jack itself, perhaps a lifted/loose ground on the KLM-2644 pcb, a bad cap, diode or resistor on that board, or as voip noted, an improper voltage or short anyway in the signal path somewhere. If all of those things check out fine, the situation becomes a little more complicated as we begin to deal with the ICs that the KLM-2644 feeds into...
Do you have the service manual for the M3? |
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pax-eterna.1 Senior Member
Joined: 03 May 2017 Posts: 393
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Posted: Sun Jan 29, 2023 2:05 am Post subject: |
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Ahhh - ok thx. Sincere apologies I usually do respond in a timely fashion for anything, but perhaps in this case as I went away from using the M3 - cannot recall why tbh - it went out of mind. Even so, I should have remembered that there were threads not replies to! |
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pax-eterna.1 Senior Member
Joined: 03 May 2017 Posts: 393
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Posted: Sun Jan 29, 2023 2:06 am Post subject: |
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HardSync wrote: | pax-eterna.1 wrote: | @ hardsync - sorry but ignored again? That was your first post on this thread??
FWIW, I do have a MM, and I do know how to test gear, and these pedals are all fine.
I will however check in the SEQ mode to see exactly what this jack is interpreting the pedal messages as though, good tip! |
I wasn't referring to this thread. I had answered several of your posts from last September without acknowledgment. Unfortunately, a lack of acknowledgment is rather common on these forums, and after twelve years of that happening, it remains one of my peeves. I'm just drama queening it... as I'm wont to do.
So I troubleshoot electronic and electrical equipment for my job. One thing I do know is that the physical appearances of components and/or cable connectors making good contact are sometimes not reliable indicators of whether a component on a PCB or perhaps the cabling between PCBs is bad.
In this case, it could be a the damper jack itself, perhaps a lifted/loose ground on the KLM-2644 pcb, a bad cap, diode or resistor on that board, or as voip noted, an improper voltage or short anyway in the signal path somewhere. If all of those things check out fine, the situation becomes a little more complicated as we begin to deal with the ICs that the KLM-2644 feeds into...
Do you have the service manual for the M3? |
Yes I think I do - the one I found has all the test codes in the first pages, but not a lot after that tbh... |
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HardSync Platinum Member
Joined: 07 Jan 2011 Posts: 794
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Posted: Sun Jan 29, 2023 9:37 pm Post subject: |
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There should be schematics in the service guide as well. I'll PM you a link... |
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pax-eterna.1 Senior Member
Joined: 03 May 2017 Posts: 393
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Posted: Sun Jan 29, 2023 10:53 pm Post subject: |
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HardSync wrote: | There should be schematics in the service guide as well. I'll PM you a link... |
Got it, thanks! |
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pax-eterna.1 Senior Member
Joined: 03 May 2017 Posts: 393
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Posted: Sun Jan 29, 2023 11:07 pm Post subject: |
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HardSync wrote: | At the risk of being ignored once again, there is an easy way on the M3 to see to exactly what your damper pedal is doing electrically. No mulitmeter required.
Go into SEQ mode, start recording a song, press damper pedal a few times. Then go into Event Edit and look at the CC data. Damper is CC64. |
Ok did that, and I can see the notes but no CC data (went to Edit Page and the Event edit, (haha it's very small screen!!) - that also applies to the standard footswitch socket, when I attached the pedal there, as well as the damper socket.
I tested the footswitch socket before recording and it works 100% as expected. |
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