I need help, analog community...does anybody have schematics for a Tascam M-50 mixer??
Okay, so here's why...I'm kind of freaking out a little...you know I've been working on drawing up the schematic for the PGM BUSS output amp and level boost circuitry on the M-__. This circuit is found on each of the 12 I/O modules, but there is also a pair of boards in the master Control Module that have a similar circuit on them to provide the selectable -10dBv/+4dBu/+8dBu output level boost for the STEREO OUT.
Remember, the M-__ is sort of a missing link between the early generation Teac/Tascam modular consoles like the Model 15 and M-16 consoles (with their plug-in modules and integrated per-module backplane), and the later generation M-50, and M-512/520 consoles with even some carryover into the M-300 series. The EQ section on the M-__ is also very close in functions and features to the EQ channels on the Tascam PE-40 rack mount parametric EQ unit. The M-__ is chock full of features found nowhere else in any Teac/Tascam mixer that made it to market, but the ancestral and descendant elements that
do exist have been occasionally helpful in troubleshooting or analysis over the years since there is no documentation that came with the M-__. For instance, since the EQ sections between the M-__ and PE-40 are so similar, I can use much of the PE-40 schematic when referencing the M-__ EQ circuit. Well, this whole level boost thing has been important because it is powered by a dedicated higher voltage set of power rails. I have no documents for the M-__ other than what I've reverse engineered, and it came with no power supply. So it's been a bit of a guessing game what kind of power the level boost circuitry actually requires. The boards in the modules are all labeled +/-35V relative to the power for the level boost circuitry, but that seems really high, and furthermore it's been a mystery whether that power should be regulated or unregulated. I'm reasonably certain as of late the power should be regulated, but the amplitude is still a mystery. Once I can determine the proper amplitude, I can finish the work on the power supply (or source a separate dedicated power supply if it truly needs to be +/-35V...the most I can get out of the PS-520 power supply I'm using will be +/-24V). In circuitry of similar function (but completely different topology) in the M-512/520 mixers the power is +/-18V. So how excited do you think it is to realize the M-50 appears to have the same level boost circuitry as the M-__ STEREO OUT level boost circuitry? I think I've been aware the M-50 had the same level boost
features as the M-__ for the STEREO OUT, but I assumed the circuitry was the same as the M-512/520 and different from the M-__...nope. Note the M-50 is the predecessor to the M-512...very similar to each other but with some notable differences...like the master outputs...M-50 features dedicated level-selectable balanced outs just like the M-__, whereas the M-512/520 have fixed unbalanced -10dBv outputs for the STEREO busses, with an independent patchable fixed -10dBv to +4dBu 8-channel balance amp section. Anyway, the point here is I was doing a regular eBay trolling this eve and something caught my eye...there's a fella whose got a bunch of listings for bits from a parted out M-50...the listings have been up for weeks or maybe months...seen them maybe dozens of times, but tonight I notice the tiny thumbnail image for one of the listings, a PCB assembly, looks like a spitting image of the balance amp boards in my M-__ Control Module. I open it up and zoom in and sure enough it looks very, very close...even right down to the component layout. Looks like my M-__ assemblies use higher quality polystyrene caps in the feedback loops of the opamp, but otherwise it's really, really close. It's hard to describe how exciting it is to identify an assembly in a production unit that is so close to my M-__...because there exist technical documents to the production unit.
This is what one of the boards looks like on the M-__:
And here is the M-50 version:
Isn't that cool??
More evidence of M-__ elements that actually made it to market!
So I need help tracking down schematics for the M-50. The operation manual is available online, but I can't find the service manual. Can anybody help me?