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  2. 12 Step foot controller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/12_Step_foot_controller

    The 12 Step can be used to play 1980s and 1990s-era synthesizers and hardware instruments that are pre-USB (e.g., a DX-7 synth or drum machine) or which do not have a USB connection, and which only have 5-pin MIDI connectors by using the KMI MIDI Expander, a Keith McMillen Instruments-made unit that is sold separately. The KMI MIDI Expander is ...

  3. Doepfer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doepfer

    The product range covers analog modular systems, MIDI controllers, MIDI hardware sequencers, MIDI-to-CV/Gate/Sync Interfaces, MIDI master keyboards and special MIDI equipment. Dieter Döpfer began developing audio hardware with a Voltage Controlled Phaser module for the Formant, a do-it-yourself-kit analog synthesizer from Elektor magazine in 1977.

  4. Roland MT-32 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_MT-32

    Article abstract mentions "The mute circuit presented here Is specially designed for use with the Roland MT-32 module, although with some small alterations it should be suitable for use with other makes of expander er synthesizer. lt is intended to eliminate the noise that the expander produces after a note-off.

  5. Rhodes Chroma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhodes_Chroma

    Rhodes also released a keyboard-less version of the Chroma called the Chroma Expander at a list price of US $3150. [3] The Chroma was one of the early microprocessor-controlled analog synthesizers. It was designed before MIDI and featured a 25-pin D-sub connector computer interface used to slave

  6. List of sound chips - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sound_chips

    Yamaha FB-01 MIDI Expander, IBM Music Feature Card, MSX (Yamaha CX5M and SFG-05), Korg DS-8 and 707 digital synthesizers: Based on Yamaha YM2151 (OPM) [66] [33] [62] Yamaha YM3812 (a.k.a. OPL2) 1985 18 9 2 Sound cards for PC (including AdLib and early Sound Blaster cards), Yamaha Portasound keyboards (PSR and PSS series) Silicon-gate CMOS LSI ...

  7. Seiko DS-250 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seiko_DS-250

    The DS-250 was an electronic keyboard manufactured in 1985 [3] by Seiko and was considered a commercial failure. [4] It was capable of generating both digital and additive sounds. [5] It is expandable with two expander units DS-310 and DS-320. [6]

  8. Ensoniq EPS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ensoniq_EPS

    The EPS has 256 Kwords of RAM on board. Ensoniq offered both a 2x (512 Kword) Memory Expander and a 4x (1 Mword) Memory Expander with SCSI interface. A company called Maartists offered both 4x and 8x memory expanders, allowing a total of 2 Mwords RAM. Extra RAM allows for longer and higher quality samples. The "2x" expander contains one ...

  9. Kurzweil K250 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurzweil_K250

    The Kurzweil K250 was manufactured until 1990, initially as an 88-key fully weighted keyboard or as an expander unit without keys called the Kurzweil K250 XP. A few years later, a rack mount version called the Kurzweil K250RMX also became available. Photo of the K250 Rack unit (the K250RMX)

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