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Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS

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  1. Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Rimozione tasti: passo 1, immagine 1 di 3 Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Rimozione tasti: passo 1, immagine 2 di 3 Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Rimozione tasti: passo 1, immagine 3 di 3
    • Per raggiungere le viti disposte sotto la tastiera, devi prima togliere alcuni tasti. Puoi usare uno strumento di apertura o un plettro. La prima immagine mostra come il dispositivo dovrebbe presentarsi dopo aver rimosso le chiavi necessarie (12 in tutto).

    • Per i quattro tasti più lunghi della tastiera, si deve intervenire a partire dal lato sinistro.

    • Per staccare gli otto tasti più piccolibisogna iniziare dal basso.

  2. Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Rimozione meccanismo a pantografo: passo 2, immagine 1 di 2 Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Rimozione meccanismo a pantografo: passo 2, immagine 2 di 2
    • Il meccanismo a pantografo degli otto tasti piccoli impedisce l'accesso alla vite sottostante.

    • Usando di nuovo uno strumento di apertura un plettro, si possono estrarre facilmente questi elementi.

    • In fase di riassemblaggio, accertati di sistemarli nel senso corretto, con la faccia superiore in alto.

  3. Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Rimozione viti tastiera: passo 3, immagine 1 di 3 Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Rimozione viti tastiera: passo 3, immagine 2 di 3 Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Rimozione viti tastiera: passo 3, immagine 3 di 3
    • Svita queste 12 viti con un cacciavite a croce Phillips #00.

    • Quindi basta tirar fuori le otto manopole ruotanti e la manopola del volume.

    • Ora è possibile sollevare lievemente la tastiera e disporla più indietro.

    Your missing the ribbon decoupling step, unless you skipped it because it’s such a tight squeeze to get back in.

    William “Zoe” FitzGerald - Replica

    The concept of removing the square panels that the knobs sit on was skipped.

    Station 2Station - Replica

  4. Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Scollega e rimuovi la tastiera: passo 4, immagine 1 di 1
    • Sblocca i cavi flessibili spingendo le due levette di bloccaggio nere disposte su entrambi i lati di ogni connettore.

    • Ora puoi tirare fuori i cavi flessibili e rimuovere completamente la tastiera.

  5. Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Rimozione display: passo 5, immagine 1 di 3 Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Rimozione display: passo 5, immagine 2 di 3 Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Rimozione display: passo 5, immagine 3 di 3
    • Apri il connettore del cavo del display usando uno strumento di apertura in plastica per far scattare verso l'alto il blocco.

    • Il display è tenuto in posizione da un adesivo poco tenace. Uno spudger può essere di aiuto per staccarlo.

    • Ora puoi scollegare il cavo e tirare fuori l'intero display.

  6. Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Scheda DSP: passo 6, immagine 1 di 2 Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS, Scheda DSP: passo 6, immagine 2 di 2
    • Stacca il connettore della batteria dalla scheda DSP.

    • Svita le due viti a croce Phillips #00 che tengono ancorata la scheda.

  7. Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS: passo 7, immagine 1 di 2 Sostituzione scheda DSP Teenage Engineering OP-1 DS: passo 7, immagine 2 di 2
    • Questo punto, puoi sollevare con cautela alla scheda DSP per accedere al connettore del cavo flessibile sottostante.

    • Scollega il cavo flessibile usando uno spudger e rimuovi la scheda DSP.

    Where can I get the board

    jake wesley - Replica

    Any luck getting a DSP board?

    Robert Herman -

Conclusione

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Tobias Isakeit

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13 Commenti

Can you advise me where I can order DSP board?

Ju-seok Jang - Replica

Hi Ju-seok Jang, unfortunately we don’t sell this spare part. You might be able to reach Teenage Engineering directly and get an answer from them where to purchase that part.

Tobias Isakeit -

I reached out to teenage engineering a month ago about ordering a replacement but they still haven’t responded. Pretty unacceptable seeing as they have a “do it yourself!” ethos for their $1,000 device…

Ben Fischer - Replica

Hi! Did you find a solution? I have the same issue. Thanks!

Juan Rodríguez Berbín -

My OP-1 wouldn’t go into boot mode, and TE told me it was probably the DSP board, and they would look at it for a fee since it was out of warranty. Now I can’t find the DSP board anywhere to do this repair. I then found out this was a common problem, a manufacturing defect. I wonder if there are enough people with these problems the EU 2 year warranty rule can be invoked, or a class-action suit of some sort. TE has basically left those who have these problems without an option to repair the TE manufacturing defect.

Rob

Robert Herman - Replica

I have the same problem! Did you find a solution? Thanks a lot!

Juan Rodríguez Berbín -

@Juan Berbin I just saw your reply, and I bumped my situation in the hopes TE will reach out and offer a DSP up for sale for my original OP-1, so I can try and repair it. It seems a lot of people have had this issue, and for the premium price of the unit, you would think they would somehow meet people half way given their success and wanting to keep their brand in good standing. Sort of how Google's "Don't Be Evil" motto went all wrong, and now TE is the same. Good luck to you. I haven't had any. And they are charging even more for the new one. I hope they don't strand their new customers.

Robert Herman -

Mine will boot most of the time, but after a very short use the knobs stop working. Naturally I attempt to restart it but once I shut it off it won’t turn back on. I also noticed that after a 20 hour charge, within one day (1 day sitting with power OFF, not in use) the battery will be dead again. Not sure how the battery can die with the device turned off. I’ve replaced the battery, the connector board, checked all connections inside, even downgraded back to the firmware it shipped with (237 I believe?). Nothing has worked. Only thing left is the DSP board. FURIOUS that a $1200 device only lasted me a year before basically becoming a paper weight. I babied it too…got an expensive case and everything…UNBELIEVABLE.

Lord Shongo - Replica

Where can I buy the dsp board? I need to replace mine. TE won’t sell me one and sends me info to some repair shop in NJ.

Jeff Martin - Replica

I have an OP1 since 2016 lying around and won't boot. Every now and again I hook it up to USB for a charge, otherwise, its the most expensive paperweight I have ever had. Last I heard, I should send it off to Sweden and have the Mainboard replaced for a few hundred euros. Absolute disgrace, as it seems just a mainboard bug. I can still run all the test (switch on & hold com) and it comes out ok on all test. But it won't boot and won't respond to software update. At first I had a few cool ideas and uses for this unit but now its just a reminder of how bad a modern startup company treats customers with trouble, especially since its obviously a product bug and not user induced. Piece of crap.....

antichicmusic - Replica

Following up on my post from 2020 above, the OP-1 I bought in July 2012, works fine except I cannot get it into the boot menu. If I hold down the COM button and power up, the speaker clicks, but I get no boot screen. If I just power on, it works as expected. It can show up as a disk via USB, and I can copy the ROM file to the root directory, but I cannot effect an update without being able to enter the boot screen.
To this day I have not been able to get a DSP board as a spare part from TE or iFixit. They are never in stock. I am not going to pay $50 for a diagnosis, a part fee, and labor for something I should be able to buy and repair at my own risk. I am hesitant to sell it, since it seems it will be hard to get decent money for it given you cannot update the OS. I was so enamored with TE in 2012, but now I guess their success allows them to become the impersonal company they didn't set out to be I am guessing. So disappointed especially given the recent rise of Right To Repair in the world and climate.

Robert Herman - Replica

My OP-1 has begun playing a single note in completely random rhythm after no incident that would cause malfunction. Would anyone here have an idea of what that would be caused by? It does whether or not its connected to midi and audio.

Keegan Kyle - Replica

Hi, my OP-1 refuses to boot and the charging lights don´t lit while charging. I'm not even sure if it's charging at least partially.
I contacted them twice and they took me to the digonosis mode that OP-1 passed with OK on all items but still won't boot.
It´s incredible to find so many people with the same problem and what is even more incredible than TE don't take charge of this situation.

liantros retrospectiva - Replica

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