I don't suppose by some freakish chance anyone knows where i could get hold of an M5232 do they? Its the oscillator chip used in the Korg Poly 800 mk1 & 2 but apparently it was also used in loads of arcade machines from that era. I can find very little information on it let alone find a replacement chip.
Anyone know of something else that might have one of these in it that might be easier to get hold of?
« Last Edit: October 28, 2008, 08:35:37 AM by Circuitbenders »
I guess you could buy $100 worth of them and then sell the spares off to people for whatever you see fair - I reckon you'd have a pretty good chance of shifting some.
Well, if anyones interested i just bought a Korg M5232 from www.vintageplanet.nl for about £35, which is a bit pricey for a single chip but there doesn't appear to be anywhere else on the planet that would sell me one. Ranger electronics didn't actually have any and neither did anywhere else, which is a bit odd when you consider that it was used in so many arcade machines. I have discovered that it was called the OKI MSM5232 in most arcade machines but i can't find much information on that either, apart from people making software emulators.
Anyway i can recommend Vintage Planet if you are looking for some hard to find old synth components. Senso (if thats actually someones name) is a helpful guy and they have a lot of useful stuff available
« Last Edit: October 28, 2008, 08:39:43 AM by Circuitbenders »
Theres a lot of mentions of MSM5232 emulation on google but i can't seem to get any kind of solid information about it, although this could well be because it appears to be a rather specialist and / or obsessive field. I've never been entirely sure why people would want to emulate ancient arcade machines and i'm still none the wiser.
To be honest i've never been that impressed by the sound of the 5232, or its use in the Poly800 anyway. Its always sounded a bit weak to my ears and the fact that you can barely hear an audible difference between the saw and square waves isn't much help.
On the Poly-800 the saw wave was generated by feeding the four octave outputs into an R/2R ladder. So, to actually sound like a saw wave you'd need to have all four octaves turned on, otherwise you'd just get different levels of saw wave.