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fwiw I recently gave away an old Oberheim Prommer to Mike Quinn's electronics in Oakland. This is a product from the 70's that addressed this idea. It even had an analog input so you could sample directly to an EPROM, what a concept. I think it may have been able to deal with chips from Simmons and Linn boxes as well as Oberheim. I imagine that thing is still over at Quinn's if anyone wants it. Quinn's is one of the quintessential electronics surplus places, you've been warned. -Alex S. At 5:07 PM -0500 6/7/02, Gary Phillips wrote: >I'm not an electronic genius or programmer, >just a dabbler and a power user... >But..... >Could anyone tell me why it is so difficult or why >there are never any techniques mentioned for exchanging >the sample rom chips in dedicated drum machines ? >I've heard about eprom burners....is the sample data always >very proprietary on different boxes, or is it just memory at >a specific data rate and sample rate stuck on a memory chip ? >EI...I've got an old Yamaha RX11 that is a great machine but >with a very dated soundset..... is it totally not worth the effort >to try to "burn your own" eproms ? Anybody have any >expertise in this area....? >Curious in Memphis........ >-- >gary >@friendlyspider.com