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| Saturn: Low pitched and slowed down audio after recap |
| Xeauron - Monday at 9:23 AM |
| Xeauron | Tuesday at 6:55 AM | ||
| Thank you for the info! Really appreciate it. I'm going to need an oscilliscope aren't I... Any recommendations on a good one for a hobbyist thats accurate and doesn't need a remortgage of a house? (Up to about £450 - £500 max I reckon - do I need to spend that much?) I'm not above buying one here if you think thing is salvagable. I'm putting together a video to run you through what I did and what I plan to do and how it looks and runs now to give you a better idea. I'll edit this post with the vid ASAP, just need to shoot and edit. EDIT: Removed (vid and links redundant) | |||
| rorirub | Today at 4:45 AM | |||
Some multimeters can read clock frequencies. You don't need to make accurate reads for this, just to make sure the clock signal is there. But I can already tell the clock signal is missing, because you are running the machine without a CD drive. The 8.464MHz signal comes from the CD drive on VA0-9 units. No CD drive = no sound clock = the sound issues you mentioned (which I can reproduce by running my units without the CD Drive). So put the CD drive back and test it again. Even if the drive has a broken laser, as long as it still has working chips to output that clock, it will be enough. The x1/3/4 crystals are fine, the console wouldn't even work if they were not. | ||||
| Xeauron | Today at 5:41 AM | |||
| Mate........ It's working perfectly. Now I'm embarrassed for a different reason, I feel so stupid lol. That's amazing, thank you! I just hastily reassembled it with the CD drive like "Surely not...." then boom, sound at the correct pitch on the BIOS. I can't thank you enough. You've just made my week. Thank you. Once you start taking to chat bots, they basically just reaffirm what you're thinking, hence why I wanted to speak to a human. I know the Saturn is a complicated beast (that's why I love it), but I didn't bother to reassemble that far as I thought it had an issue. The CD drive....omg.
That's what was playing on my mind, I was thinking how could the sound not be recieving the correct clock but the CPUs and everything else is fine. I also didn't think I hit it with anywhere near enough heat to cause issues. | ||||
| rorirub | Today at 5:52 AM | |||
I did say that the clock path goes from the cd drive, to the pll, to the sound chips... | ||||
| Xeauron | Today at 6:57 AM | ||
| Yes, for some reason I thought you meant the CD block daughter board. I know you mentioned the ribbon - I was in distress thinking I'd just ruined a Saturn, and didn't read your post properly. Again, thank you. I do still need to recap the CD drive board, if you know of anywhere I can find a disassembly instructions - let me know. I'm waiting on one of those bolt action desoldering tools before tackling that. | |||
| rorirub | Today at 7:17 AM | ||
| The CD board only uses THT caps from what I remember, you can easily remove those even with a chisel tip soldering iron. I don't know what you mean by instructions - disconnect the drive, identify the caps, solder them out, solder in replacements, reconnect it. | |||
| Xeauron | Today at 8:30 AM | |||
I mean disassembly instructions - it's fine I found a video. I've never done it before so it's nice to have steps - where to pinch the plastic, where tabs are, where screws are - how to get the board seperated ect. Yes I could work it out, but it's quicker to have the steps already laid out that's all. Thank you again for all your help, I really appreciate it. | ||||
| rorirub | Today at 9:40 AM | ||
| But... you already have the unit disassembled, I don't understand. Either way, it's just unscrew -> take top off, then pull stuff out one by one. | |||
| Xeauron | Today at 1:00 PM | |||
What? No I don't... The self contained CD-ROM assembly I plugged back in is still in one piece. Needs cleaning for a start, there's bits of fluff and hair inside from wherever it's been (Ebay purchase), then it needs recapping - caps that are under the metal plate which are awkward to reach. | ||||