T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1813.1 | Already out there somewhere. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Wed Dec 14 1988 16:09 | 11 |
| This topic has been discussed several times in previous conference
topics. One fellow has ostensibly created his own sequencer and h/w
interface for the PRO.
Try the following:
DIR/TITL={PDP,DEC,RS232}
I'm sure something reasonable will show up.
-b
|
1813.2 | | VAXRT::GENTRY | Megan Gentry MLO5-5/E76 | Wed Dec 14 1988 16:50 | 9 |
|
I have followed some of those notes, but most of them require more
hardware hacking than I have the skill for, or require alteration
of standard boards. I'm looking for something that I could unplug
from a board on one machine and plug into a board on another
machine.
I'd like to see what ideas people have, and see if any further
solutions may have been found.
|
1813.3 | Hardware ain't the tough part | MENTOR::REG | Let's invent self referential image enhancing software | Wed Dec 14 1988 17:29 | 11 |
|
I suppose one could just take whatever "serial line" port
there is and plug a MIDI port adapter onto it ?? kinda like they
do for Macs and Amigas.
The "Challenging" part is to write a sequencer and all its
little, make that BIG editing functions, IMHO.
R
|
1813.4 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Richard Clayderman wannabe | Wed Dec 14 1988 20:31 | 3 |
| don't forget the opto-isolator in front of the UART.
karl
|
1813.5 | x32 clock | DFLAT::DICKSON | Plan data flows first | Thu Dec 15 1988 09:19 | 5 |
| And you have to get the clock-rate right. The Mac's built in serial
port hardware is considerably more flexible than the stuff we put on our
serial boards. Those MIDI adaptors for the Mac supply a 1MHz clock
signal that the mac divides by 32 to run the port. If the DEC hardware
you are using will not take an x32 external clock, you are out of luck.
|
1813.6 | A bit overkill. Think simple. | LEDDEV::ROSS | shiver me timbres.... | Thu Dec 15 1988 10:54 | 19 |
|
The midi spec requires certain rise and fall times at the
opto. You may or may not be able to get most 20ma converters
tweaked to handle this, altho the 5ma is probably no problem.
I have a design (actually, also layed-out boards) that just
plugs into a DLVJ1 and is the midi interface you might be
desiring...
Ive used it with a 11-23 and 11-73. With RT11, you can even
handle a full bandwith system exclusive dump of voice data
real time to floppy.....
send me some mail...
RKNRON::ROSS
ron
|
1813.7 | | VAXRT::GENTRY | Megan Gentry MLO5-5/E76 | Thu Dec 15 1988 12:31 | 8 |
|
RE: .4
> don't forget the opto-isolator in front of the UART.
(Assuming above is regarding idea (2) from my base note).
Is the isolator on the DRV-side or the MIDI-side of the UART?
|
1813.8 | | ANT::JANZEN | Tom LMO2/O23 296-5421 | Thu Dec 15 1988 12:56 | 3 |
| the opto-isolator is on the midi side. it isolates systems and keep
ground currents away so that they don't cause hum and crud etc.
Tom
|
1813.9 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Richard Clayderman wannabe | Fri Dec 16 1988 11:34 | 8 |
| < Note 1813.6 by LEDDEV::ROSS "shiver me timbres...." >
> I have a design (actually, also layed-out boards) that just
> plugs into a DLVJ1 ........ Ive used it with a 11-23 and 11-73.
Ronn.. would this work on a VAX using the KXJ11 board ? J11 processor,
512Kb memory, programmable (presumably DLVJ1-emulatable) ports...?
karl,still trying to use his MVII creatively..
|