I'm doing some research for an upcoming documentary I'm working on about old-school sound & music. I have found that some of the Yamaha keyboards used the YM3812 sound chip, just like was found in the original Adlib and Soundblaster cards. I would like to find out exactly which keyboards had this chip, and possibly a list of keyboards that had very similar chips. All of my google-searching has lead me here since I guess the only other people interested in old-school keyboards are circuit-benders.
My current list includes:
Yamaha PSR-11
Yamaha PSR-12
Yamaha PSR-31
Yamaha PSR-32
Yamaha PSS-460
Possibly the PSS-560/PSS570 (I found conflicting info on these)
Part of the reason I want this list is to tell the viewer. But also part of the reason is because I want to purchase one of these from ebay to demonstrate it. But these are apparently hard to find. And I want to find the absolute BEST keyboard I can find, based on this chip. So preferably I would want one with full-sized keys and 5 octaves. So right now, the only one on the list is the PSR-31 and 32. I'm hoping to find some more, maybe something better.
Also, I looked at the user manual on the PSR-31 and it shows to have a port on the back for an "expression pedal" and said something about controlling the volume. Obviously, I'd much prefer a sustain pedal. I don't suppose that is what they really meant?
The PSS 170, 270, and PSR-6 used the OPLL chip, which is a cut down OPL2 core. But very similar to the Sound Blaster, just much more primitive sounding