T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
302.1 | You Need a Switch! | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Tue Apr 08 1986 11:41 | 13 |
| You ought to seriously consider getting some form of MIDI switch.
Roland makes two nice little boxes, the MPU-104 and MPU-105,
that provide switched 1 in 5 out and 5 in 1 out multiplexing and
demultiplexing. The 1 in 5 out is basic a switched thru box;
you can drive up to 5 MIDI ins in parallel with it. The 5 in
1 out is a one-at-a-time switch. The two units can be rack mounted
side by side. The thru box is about $60, the input switch about
$80, and the rack kit about $20.
The JX-3P has no MIDI out? Extraordinary!
len.
|
302.2 | No, not this again! :^) | MENTOR::COTE | Sue me if I play too long... | Tue Apr 08 1986 11:48 | 6 |
| Not to revert back to note 261 but...
The JX3-P does have MIDI out. It's just not part of my
configuration. It DOESN'T have MIDI thru.
Edd
|
302.3 | MIDI Mixer | DSSDEV::SAUTER | John Sauter | Tue Apr 08 1986 13:50 | 7 |
| I recently got a 5 in 5 out MIDI switch from a mail-order company
in Oregon. I have some problems with the lack of a rugged box
and the EMI, but it does work. Saves a lot of cable pushing, and
makes the distance from the sequencer to each instrument equal.
When more than one input is enabled for a particular output it
performs the "merge" function.
John Sauter
|
302.4 | length of cords? | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Tue Apr 08 1986 15:04 | 11 |
|
Sorry to butt in, but this doesn't merit a note of its own,
and does have some relevance to MIDI setups.
Does the length of a MIDI cable have any relation to the
problem of delay?
I.e., is a 5 foot cord preferable to a 10 ft cord? Ideally,
should all the cords be the same length?
- Karl
|
302.6 | Not Skew But Edge Distortion | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Tue Apr 08 1986 16:51 | 32 |
| Skew across multiple cable lengths is not a problem, but "smearing"
of the edges is a problem with long cables. I have heard over and
over again, "don't use MIDI cables over 10m (30 ft) long". I think
the standard itself says something about maximum cable length.
For this same reason, shorter is better; the problem is not the
skew that Tom mentions but waveform distortion. For similar reasons,
only use real MIDI cables, not DIN cables (even though the connectors
are the same). The MIDI cables use twisted pair internally, a DIN
cable is shielded audio cable. DIN cables also have more conductors
than is necessary, which the Roland DIN sync convention uses (in
addition to the "data" line, there's a start/stop line). At least
one manufacturer (ProCo?) makes a cable called MIDI-Plus which
satisfies the MIDI loading/distortion requirements but also has
the additional wires for Roland sync use.
The MIDI bit rate is 31.25 Kbits/sec; this is 32 microseconds per
bit, so Tom's skew estimate is very conservative.
Re John's 5 in 5 out switcher - merging is a function that most
switch builders avoid by making the input a 1 of n choice; merging
requires maintaining the time coherence of MIDI messages (i.e.,
you can only interleave whole messages, hence must provide some
buffering and data stream interpretation). A 1 of n input switch
can be dumb. I have yet to find a need to merge two MIDI data streams
in real time that cannot be addressed by the overdub capability of
my sequencers.
Incidentally, I'm using an 8 in 10 out switch from JLCooper, with
1 in and 1 out each feeding a Roland MPU-104 and MPU-105.
len.
|
302.7 | Running Status, too | DSSDEV::SAUTER | John Sauter | Tue Apr 08 1986 18:10 | 3 |
| It's worse than interleaving messages. You must also watch out
for the running status byte.
John Sauter
|
302.8 | | APOLLO::DEHAHN | high groove quotient | Wed Apr 09 1986 08:37 | 19 |
|
FYI, the MIDI spec mentions 50 feet (15 meters) as the maximum cable
length. Maybe you could use a line driver/repeater if you need longer
runs.
I agree with Len, it's not the skew, since you have ~30 microseconds
to play with. The spec mentions 2 microseconds rise/fall times on
the signal transitions.......the additional capacitance of a longer
cable will surely effect this and cause MIDI waveform distortion.
How tolerant the MIDI reciever is of this I'm not sure, they most
likely use some form of Schmitt trigger which can tolerate some
hysteresis.
my $.02 worth
CdH
|
302.9 | More on Delays | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Wed Apr 09 1986 10:30 | 18 |
| Distortion can also become a problem if you go through too many
successive THRUs. Recommended practice is no more than 2! The problem
here is that the spec I believe requires opto-isolation for the
THRU (sort of like a repeater), and the delays and distortions can
add up.
MIDI protocol and line delay is a problem that is more theoretical
than practical. Many synths take longer to respond to a note on
message (or a keyboard event) than the length of a whole chord's
worth of MIDI messages. I have heard numbers like 10 milliseconds.
At 30 usec per bit, and 11 bits per byte (including the start and
stop bits, as it's an synchronous protocol), that's 330 usec per byte,
and at 4 bytes per message, that's 1.32 msec per message, so you can
transmit almost 8 messages in the time it takes some keyboards to
respond to one.
len.
|
302.10 | Request for more info on MIDI Mixer | LEZAH::MEYERS | | Wed Apr 09 1986 12:54 | 9 |
| I might be interested in buying a switch like that. Could you let
us know the company that you ordered it from and the cost? Also,
what's the maximum number of inputs that can be merged to any one
output?
Do you know if this was ever advertised or reviewed in Keyboard?
This switch sound more versatile than any I've seen there.
Joe Meyers
|
302.11 | Separate Topic | DSSDEV::SAUTER | John Sauter | Wed Apr 09 1986 14:44 | 3 |
| See note 304. I was mistaken about the number of inputs and outputs.
It's 4 and 4.
John Sauter
|