Post
by EMwhite » Fri Jan 31, 2014 10:16 am
Expect assembly, not soldering. Expect some high level calibration; it's more about the experience than anything. But these days, there is not much in the way of fume huffing going on within the assembly lines, even on the top end Voyager. Have a watch of the video and you will see. It's not trivial by any means and calibration/tuning appears as if it would appear to be 1/2 of the job considering how many pots are on the analog board.
But I would expect:
1. attach potentiometer board to chassis w/4 screws; attach jack board to chassis
2. affix potentiometer and switch washers nuts and knobs
3. connect ribbon cables from main board to pot board and to jack board
4. attach power switch to chassis and MTA connector to main board
5. power up and flash firmware
6. measure voltage at test point A; apply voltage to CV input 1, calibrate, test again
7. attach cover with 4 screws
That's how you build a Minitaur anyway... Open any product and you might see hot glue, used to bolster a wired connection or prevent an MTA from wiggling off; Early runs of certain products (a few of the MoogerFoogers are this way) have some very very fine soldering of jumpers or mini assemblies that I have to assume were not required after the first board were revised. But product development is more than just the electronic circuit design, interface layout, and component selection... it's about industrial engineering of casing and assembly practices, supply chain and sourcing, and more.
I just picked up a MF-Boost and the first thing I did was to take it apart, piece by piece. Every nut and screw. I like reading the text on the circuit boards, seeing what components were used and putting it back together again.
I would expect the 6 hours to be similar to the new Korg MS-20 kit as far as what skills are expected of the assembler. It's more about the experience, meeting the people, the tech talk and the stories, what must be an extended tour and introduction to Cyril, Steve D. Amos and the other engineers; That part will be worth the fee alone (in my humble opinion) and you'll have a rather unique memento to take home with you and play with.
'76 Minimoog, Taurus 3, Oberheim FVS + Son of 2-voice; Sequential ProOne; Juno 106; Moog Model 15; Kurzweil 250; Hammond M3; and a handful of Fender Basses
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