Added: 4 years ago
From: DocBlasto
Views: 5,218
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  • I would do this to my sk-1 but im to fond of it as it was something i got from a relative who is now died so i wont bent it it have cross my mind a many times though i will not say it hasnt but if i break it then i cant replace it

  • Well I don't want to talk you into mutilating your beloved SK-1, but in my (limited) experience I've found that the old Casio keyboards are very sturdy. I don't know your level of skill, but as long as you're careful with your work, you're unlikely to short it out in a way that actually damages the circuitry. I've blown up many modern toys, but the SK-10 seems to just keep on working.

  • fucking niiiiiiiiice sounds !!!

  • sounds great,could you upload the diagram? ty

  • Neat press-knobs!  Great spacey sounds. Great job on adding the 1/4 audio... I couldn't find a suitable method other than making a 1/8" dongle for my SK-10.

    I got some similar garg-sounds out of my MT-40... I hope my SK-10 project turns out as well as this.

    KW

  • Absolutely. There is more in there, I'm sure. I'm impatient, so I'm often in a rush to put it back together and play... I haven't necessary gotten everything out of it.

    The other day, my girlfriend was playing with various buttons at once, using the demo, and finding she could get several demo songs to activate simultaneously, and out of sync with one another. I've fried a bunch of keyboards and other toys, but this old Casio is un-killable.

  • *laughs* That's too much. I don't know if I could desecrate "hi-ho," by having other songs stomp on it... Of course I can!

    I was working on my SK-10 last night. I'm closer to completion, I'm impatient myself. I'll certainly post the results. That is, if it survives band practice...

    KW

  • Hi, what bends have you already done?

    I'm especially interested in the delay/loop sound about halfway in.

  • Yeah, it's a bit of a mystery to me. It appears to send the last 4 keys pressed into a loop, each individual key looping at a speed based on the frequency of the note. For instance, "C" in the middle octave loops at half the speed as "C" in the next octave up. Not sure which bend created that... I'm more of a tinkerer than a scientist. It definitely involves contacts coming off the chip.

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