Akai mpc2000xl $550
Akai EB-16 fx option $175
Akai FMX008m flash rom option $200
Akai S-950 $200
Roland RC-100 Remote control $100
Roland DT-100 Tablet $175
Mackie Micro 1202
ASR-10/ASR-88 SCSI cabling kit
http://shop.ebay.com/mrinternational/m.html?_nkw=&_armrs=1&_from=&_ipg=&_tr…
Keep checkin'
Several more pieces to come.. Roland S-550(x2) Akai S-2000(x2), ASR-10 keys, EPS-16+ keys, DBX, Ashley, and Symetrix comps, Lexicon FX, etc
I might.... post up 1, or 2 E-MU SP-12's..that will be a hard one
At 5/11/2010 03:39 PM, jsegovia(a)mindspring.com wrote:
>Right, but it's very easy to connect an external hard drive to the S-760.
s750 is exactly the same. SCSI plug on the back.
Dennis <db(a)skylab2000.com>
Brainforest Productions, Los Angeles
I wanted the same thing, but I ended up removing the floppy drive and
installing an internal SCSI zip 100MB drive in it's place. NOTE: Before
attempting the procedure below be sure to boot from an S-750 floppy disk
and install the S-750 OS onto a blank ZIP disk BEFORE you remove the
floppy drive or you won't be able to boot the S-750 from the zip drive.
I routed a 25 pin SCSI cable from the SCSI connection on the back of the
S-750 into the inside of the S-750. Depending on how precious your S-750
is to you, you can cut a notch in the enclosure on the top to allow for
the cable, or just do like I did and screw the S-750's enclosure down over
the cable. That bent the tin enclosure a little but it wasn't visible from
the front. I then scavenged a cable from an old SCSI hard drive enclosure
that had a 50 pin SCSI connector for a SCSI drive on one end, and the 25
pin SCSI connector on the other and connected up the zip drive. I also
used the power connector for the floppy drive to power the zip drive.
Remember to set the SCSI ID on the zip drive accordingly to avoid
conflicts. The cabling looked like hell from the back, but it all worked.
Andy
At 5/11/2010 07:58 AM, t'byte wrote:
Hi everybody,
I read that the S-750 was just basically an S-770 with lesser A/D
converters and no internal hard drive. Wondering if I could just add an
internal hard drive to my S-750, I opened it up yesterday. Couldn't find
any place for a hard drive, though. Also it looked like there was a place
on the S-750 mainboard for a 50-pin internal SCSI connector, without any
connector soldered on. So I guess there is also no actual fixture in the
S-750 for the hard drive to go, eh?
I didn't fully disassemble the thing, but in peeking around, I did see
that the lower board (with the audio outputs on it) does say "S-770" on
the PCB. The upper board says S-750 though.
Thanks
Tim
The s760 doesn't have a hard drive either, so will be the same issue.
At 5/11/2010 01:03 PM, jsegovia(a)mindspring.com wrote:
>I can't help you with the technical questions, but at this point with
>little technical help available from Roland and with so many S-760s
>available for so little money, why not just spring for the S-760? There
>are a couple on ebay right now for $125-169. I paid a lot more for mine
>seven or eight years ago.
Dennis <db(a)skylab2000.com>
Brainforest Productions, Los Angeles
Hi everybody,
I read that the S-750 was just basically an S-770 with lesser A/D
converters and no internal hard drive. Wondering if I could just add an
internal hard drive to my S-750, I opened it up yesterday. Couldn't find
any place for a hard drive, though. Also it looked like there was a place
on the S-750 mainboard for a 50-pin internal SCSI connector, without any
connector soldered on. So I guess there is also no actual fixture in the
S-750 for the hard drive to go, eh?
I didn't fully disassemble the thing, but in peeking around, I did see
that the lower board (with the audio outputs on it) does say "S-770" on
the PCB. The upper board says S-750 though.
Thanks
Tim