jeffbeckib wrote:yes, but the schematic is not with the atmega32, so the pins are all different.
Atmega32/324/644 all have the same pinout, but it doesn't matter since I failed to mention it in the documentation.
jeffbeckib wrote:yes, but the schematic is not with the atmega32, so the pins are all different.
dmitri wrote:jeffbeckib wrote:Absolutely due to lack of documentation. First off, you have a section on soldering the parts which has No information on it, I still can't even find a schematic of the all in one board. All I can find is the analog and digital board schematics. Basically all the questions I asked in the beginning regarding part identification could have all been answered by 1 page of component identification with a resister color code chart. Even just one picture of the 2.8 all in one board with all the components synthex provided installed would be a big help.
And a troubleshooting section off all the pin testing I did wouldn't be a bad idea either.
You're again mixing up things. I'm loosing the will to help you.
dmitri wrote:jeffbeckib wrote:yes, but the schematic is not with the atmega32, so the pins are all different.
Atmega32/324/644 all have the same pinout, but it doesn't matter since I failed to mention it in the documentation.
jeffbeckib wrote:How does it have the same pinout? the atmega32 has pins 1-40 in sequence, the one in the schematic is all over the place going from 1-8 then jumping to 14-21, 9,12,13. Am I just reading it wrong?
jeffbeckib wrote:Synthex wrote:If you want, you can send me (by airmail) your PCB for a complete diagnosis.
This will avoid a waste of time for Dmitri and me.
Where are you located? France? My bass players wife is in Paris on business, is that anywhere near you? Perhaps I can have her pickup a new PCB all in one. I have a feeling this one may be damaged now and have broken traces.
mcalilj wrote:jeffbeckib wrote:Synthex wrote:If you want, you can send me (by airmail) your PCB for a complete diagnosis.
This will avoid a waste of time for Dmitri and me.
Where are you located? France? My bass players wife is in Paris on business, is that anywhere near you? Perhaps I can have her pickup a new PCB all in one. I have a feeling this one may be damaged now and have broken traces.
I assume you're offering to purchase a new PCB kit from him. I suggest you take Synthex up on his offer to diagnose your board, if the offer still stands. It may be cheaper for you to airmail it there and back than for you to buy a whole new kit. This topic is now quite grueling, we're all in pain just trying to follow it . I can't imagine how frustrated you are right now.
And yes, Synthex is only one person, and Dmitri is another, separate person... as prolific as these two guys are, I can see how you might have confused them to be a whole organization of people
Just one more comment: instead of criticizing Dmitri and Synthex for not selling kits pre-assembled, I suggest that, you send your complaints to Alesis, Roland, Yamaha, Simmons, etc. for not offering a module that's as good as MegaDrum. But be prepared to pay at least $400 if any of those companies release a product like this.
Or, better yet, put your money where your mouth is and just buy one of the prebuilt modules Dmitri currently has up for grabs: http://www.megadrum.info/forums/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=519
I would be more than happy to do anything I can to get this product in every drummers hands. I think electronic drums are the way of the future, and finally companies like Toontrack and Fxpansion have sounds that warrant using electronic drums live...mcalilj wrote:Got it. Not trying to push your buttons... I guess it comes down to the old adage, you get what you pay for. For the amount of functionality you get, these kits are dirt cheap, even with the new 10eu donation. I guess you're paying the difference with a headache. My main point was, quit banging your head against the wall and take Synthex up on his offer to diagnose it for you! That was a very gracious offer from him.I just thought at this stage if I'm gonna pay to send my board from NY to France and wait for it to come back, I may as well just purchase a completely soldered board with the components already in.
I beg to differ with you on the documentation. There's loads of documentation on this site. I know it's hard to sort through the forums sometimes, but it can be done. If I understand this thread correctly, you weren't even looking at the pdf manual until a few posts ago.no I've had the manual, but I can't read schematics like these very well, and I couldn't make out the pinouts on the atmega since it wasn't showing an atmega32 on the schematic, and to my uninformed eye it looked like the pins weren't in sequence like on the atmega32.
Sure, it would be nice if everything was organized where you can find it more easily. But remember that all the information on this site is provided for free. Dmitri didn't have to share any of this information with us, but he decided to do it anyway. Numerous others have volunteered their time to improve this project. I'm not trying to be flip, but maybe after you get your build sorted out you can volunteer your time to improve the documentation?
jeffbeckib wrote:I would be more than happy to do anything I can to get this product in every drummers hands. I think electronic drums are the way of the future, and finally companies like Toontrack and Fxpansion have sounds that warrant using electronic drums live...
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