| Art,
I have a CT-640 also and have had times when I see exactly what you describe.
I think I always moved the mode switch back off the MIDI setting, powered off
and back on, and switched back into MIDI and it worked. This has happened a
few times and it was always solved by switches on the keyboard.
Proabably not your problem, but I thought I'd mention it...
...richard
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| I've never looked at it, but I think it's a current-loop signal. To be
sure, look at the transmit wires, then move to the receive wires and
look for the same indications. The signalling speed is 31,250 baud,
so you may have to look quick.
The real information is in the MIDI standard, of course.
John Sauter
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| As an update, I am going around and around with this problem. I
thought perhaps my CASIO (CT630 not CT640) had a bad OUT circuit,
but hooking it to another keyboard proved me wrong. I also built
another MIDI interface (the latest AMIGOTIMES) which provides for
only one IN and one OUT circuit. Real simple stuff - none of the
passing the serial port, thru's, extra IN's, extra OUT's,
switches, etc., that the AMAZING Computing MIDI interface I built
first has. Bottom line, is that I have exactly the same problem
with this 'new' interface as the problem referenced in the base
note with the first interface - AMIGA can talk to the keyboard,
but keyboard can't talk to the AMIGA.
Brien Roscetti, an A500 MIDI aficionado :-), has been kind enough
to volunteer to assist me in checking out my interface on his
spare A1000 and to apply his technical talents to debugging it (he
has been considering building an interface for his A1000, so this
will give him an opportunity to try one out).
One thing that comes to mind (and given Brien's main AMIGA is his
A500 he was unable to comment on), is the A1000 problem associated
with too many 'hang ons', the need to ground PALS, etc., etc.
Could this be causing my problem?? I'm grasping again.....
My configuration is as follows:
- A1000
- 512k internal memory.
- 2meg Micron (ASDG) board on the side (powered by its own P/S)
- Wedge driving an RD53.
- LA75P on the parallel port.
- Scholar (when I'm not trying to get this $%#@ midi thing working)
on the serial port
- Internal and external 3 1/2" drive.
- 5 1/4" drive (with its own P/S).
Note that the serial port WORKS FINE with the Scholar.
If anyone has any thoughts, I would again appreciate hearing from
you.
Art (who wishes sometimes he lived closer to the GMA when problems
like this arise)
|
|
Just a quick one to close off this note, as well as to publicly
express my gratitude to Brien Roscetti.
THANKS AGAIN BRIEN!!!!
Through Brien's efforts (I apologize Brien if I am misquoting or
misrepresenting you at all), the problem was isolated to the 220
ohm resistor on the input circuit. While this resistor provides
protection to the circuit against a crosswired MIDI cable, it also
offered just enough resistance to stifle the signal from the CASIO
keyboard (keyboards actually, because I tested it with a couple of
flavours of CASIO, as did Brien) to the AMIGA. The problem became
apparent when the interface worked fine with Brien's Yamaha
keyboard(s), but not the CASIO. When the resistor value was
lowered, the CASIO worked!
Who would have thunk it would have been that simple!?
Art
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