A newbie's experience building Megadrum
Posted: Sun Aug 10, 2008 11:55 am
Hi all,
I'm a newbie to megadrum and have just finished the intial construction phase using the amazing Synthex all in one kit, so I just wanted to put down in words my experiences which will hopefully help some others out there.
As far as electronic go my skill level isn't brilliant but I know the difference between a resistor and a capacitor and how to solder, and it seems that is enough!
Essential tools were a cheap multimeter to check for short-circuits on neighbouring pins, and a magnifying glass to read the tiny writing on the capacitors, plus I found the following sites which helped with figuring out which parts are what...
Resistor colour codes: http://wiki.xtronics.com/index.php/Resistor_Codes
Capacitor code information: http://www.csgnetwork.com/capcodeinfo.html
Since everything is clearly marked on the board it was very easy to see where things should go, but even so I did find Synthex's board photos extremely useful.
The 40pin ribbon cable is an old IDE cable I had lying around.
My OS is Windows Server 2008 x64 and when connected via USB the device is listed under Sound, video and game controllers as "MegaDrum MIDI USB", no driver installation required, and no firmware updates needed thanks to Synthex.
I'm using a Jobeky snare and an impromptu kick using a Maplin piezo until my KD8 arrives next week. I was amazed that my initial wiring attempt succeeded -- simply connect the kick pizeo red wire to the ribbon wire #5 and the black wire to ribbon wire #1 (ground), easy!
My Echo Mia Midi gives 1ms latency @32 samples @96k, and addictive drums plays better than I thought possible considering I haven't even gotten to tweak the settings yet!
The next phase is to hook up the lcd and keyboard, jacks and box, then make some diy toms
Dimitri, I have contributed as a gesture of appreciation for your hard work.
Cheers,
Andy.
I'm a newbie to megadrum and have just finished the intial construction phase using the amazing Synthex all in one kit, so I just wanted to put down in words my experiences which will hopefully help some others out there.
As far as electronic go my skill level isn't brilliant but I know the difference between a resistor and a capacitor and how to solder, and it seems that is enough!
Essential tools were a cheap multimeter to check for short-circuits on neighbouring pins, and a magnifying glass to read the tiny writing on the capacitors, plus I found the following sites which helped with figuring out which parts are what...
Resistor colour codes: http://wiki.xtronics.com/index.php/Resistor_Codes
Capacitor code information: http://www.csgnetwork.com/capcodeinfo.html
Since everything is clearly marked on the board it was very easy to see where things should go, but even so I did find Synthex's board photos extremely useful.
The 40pin ribbon cable is an old IDE cable I had lying around.
My OS is Windows Server 2008 x64 and when connected via USB the device is listed under Sound, video and game controllers as "MegaDrum MIDI USB", no driver installation required, and no firmware updates needed thanks to Synthex.
I'm using a Jobeky snare and an impromptu kick using a Maplin piezo until my KD8 arrives next week. I was amazed that my initial wiring attempt succeeded -- simply connect the kick pizeo red wire to the ribbon wire #5 and the black wire to ribbon wire #1 (ground), easy!
My Echo Mia Midi gives 1ms latency @32 samples @96k, and addictive drums plays better than I thought possible considering I haven't even gotten to tweak the settings yet!
The next phase is to hook up the lcd and keyboard, jacks and box, then make some diy toms
Dimitri, I have contributed as a gesture of appreciation for your hard work.
Cheers,
Andy.