Hi.
I just got a Roland RE-201 Space Echo in the house, and the reverb unit doesn't work on it. The preamps and tape echo bits are fine. I'm trying to narrow down the problem with the few tools I have, and... well, here's what I did. If someone can look at this and diagnose it I'd be thankful:
I first disconnected the spring reverb tank, and shorted the i/o cables with a double female RCA plug, thus bypassing the tank. This added a noise pulse to the output signal from the 201, and I assume that might tell me that the cables are OK (?).
The pulse disappeared when I disconnected the short. The amplitude of the pulse didn't change when I turned the Rev amp knob, but I guess there's some serious mismatching going on with the rev preamp and the missing coils and whatnot...
I then connected the output from the 201 straight into the reverb unit (using known good cables), and got nothing. Nada. A typical springy boing when I touched it, but nothing went *through* it. There's no preamp or anything, so this might not be a good test. What do I know (this is why I'm asking)?
Is it fair to assume, after such crude tests, that the coil on the input side is broken?
Or do I have to do more sophisticated tests?
Should I expect a good, useful signal from the shorted i/o-cables bypassing the reverb tank when I turn up the rev level?
Please help - the result of this decides whether I keep it or give it back to the seller, who was kind and honest enough to admit he hadn't tested the rev and would take it back rather than pay for repairs. But if I can repair it myself I'd like to keep it...
So. Anyone familiar with this? Am I struggling with a known problem?
Tormod
I just got a Roland RE-201 Space Echo in the house, and the reverb unit doesn't work on it. The preamps and tape echo bits are fine. I'm trying to narrow down the problem with the few tools I have, and... well, here's what I did. If someone can look at this and diagnose it I'd be thankful:
I first disconnected the spring reverb tank, and shorted the i/o cables with a double female RCA plug, thus bypassing the tank. This added a noise pulse to the output signal from the 201, and I assume that might tell me that the cables are OK (?).
The pulse disappeared when I disconnected the short. The amplitude of the pulse didn't change when I turned the Rev amp knob, but I guess there's some serious mismatching going on with the rev preamp and the missing coils and whatnot...
I then connected the output from the 201 straight into the reverb unit (using known good cables), and got nothing. Nada. A typical springy boing when I touched it, but nothing went *through* it. There's no preamp or anything, so this might not be a good test. What do I know (this is why I'm asking)?
Is it fair to assume, after such crude tests, that the coil on the input side is broken?
Or do I have to do more sophisticated tests?
Should I expect a good, useful signal from the shorted i/o-cables bypassing the reverb tank when I turn up the rev level?
Please help - the result of this decides whether I keep it or give it back to the seller, who was kind and honest enough to admit he hadn't tested the rev and would take it back rather than pay for repairs. But if I can repair it myself I'd like to keep it...
So. Anyone familiar with this? Am I struggling with a known problem?
Tormod
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