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Another button going out.

Started by Afton72, May 13, 2019, 09:56:59 PM

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Afton72

   Hi All,       
               PSR S900
              Well it looks like the A button "at left of screen" is losing contact when pressed.             I don't think it's long before it won't contact at all.

   I can't find the Forum threads where dirty contacts were discussed some time ago.           It started by not working 1st push, then a little wriggle, now it took a lot of wriggles this morning.
           Open to suggestions.

                           Thank You,            Alan.

Afton72

       Doesn't anybody want to have a guess for me  PLEASE     it's getting nearly unusable. 


I don't think it's the screen, everything else seems to be OK.     Do you have to remove the screen to replace the "A"  button?


   Thanks.

travlin-easy

Unfortunately, Yamaha went to a carbon contact button system, which turned out to be a nightmare. The old positive latching buttons on the old keyboards are still functioning today, while most of the carbon contact buttons have failed.

The bad news is they cannot be repaired, and the entire row of buttons on that side is a single strip, not individual buttons.

Try spraying some canned air on the button, which sometimes blows off a tiny particle of dirt or grit that may be fouling the button switch. DO NOT use WD-40 or a similar product. This usually results in a dead short and could possibly damage the mother board.

In some instances, the buttons on both sides of the display were part of the display board. Try contacting Yamaha Customer Service in your part of the world and they may provide you with a free fix. This happened in the past when the displays went dead, even long after the warranty expired.

Hope this helps,

Gary 8)
Love Those Yammies...

Afton72


            Oh dear, I don't really need this now.     But thank you Roy & Gary.


               Cheers,       Alan

PierreSW

Hey!
One way to get around this problem is to change the view with the view button and then use the data wheel and the enter button.
Greetings Pierre
YAMAHA Genos 2, YAMAHA MFC10, Bose L1 II-pa,Mixer T1 ToneMatch, ZUM STEEL.

Afton72

  Thanks Piere,       That's a big help for now.    Only I can't see any "View" button on this S900, unless  under another name. But I can get around my files much more.
           Bit worried about a few other buttons.

              Thank You,   Alan   

PierreSW

Quote from: Afton72 on May 17, 2019, 11:05:54 PM
I can't see any "View" button on this S900

The View button may only be on the Tyros,
but you have the data wheel and the enter button I hope.
// Pierre

[attachment deleted by admin]
YAMAHA Genos 2, YAMAHA MFC10, Bose L1 II-pa,Mixer T1 ToneMatch, ZUM STEEL.

andyg

Quote from: Roy_T on May 17, 2019, 06:15:10 PM
The new PSR-S670 has omitted the screen buttons entirely, and relies completely on the data wheel and enter button for scrolling through and selecting screen items.  I wonder if this could be a harbringer of things to come for the rest of the PSR-S line.  In view of Gary's comments on the carbon contact switches, this would be ten fewer items to go bad.

I doubt it very much. The 670 is a different beastie to the 9xx models. A lot closer than the previous 6xx models, for sure, but not the same. The O/S of the 9xx is more advanced, and I personally find the scroll, dial, press enter etc method a PITA! If we see a big change to the 9xx models, it will be a move to a touch screen, I'm sure.

Carbon contacts are here to stay, they're found in just about everything and have been a bit of a pain since they first came on the scene. It only takes a bit of grit or dirt to get in and the problems start. Unfortunately many people then start pressing the button harder and harder to try to 'fix' the problem. Alas, this just makes it worse. The only real solution is to open to keyboard up enough to get access to the offending carbon contact, then either use an air can or, better still, some denatured alcohol on a cotton bud/Q-tip. While the contact is exposed, you may as well do all the others. Sometimes you just have to replace the contact strip.

None of the cleaning or replacement processes take much time in themselves. Dismantling and reassembling the keyboard - that's a longer job. Just be thankful you don't have a top of the range organ to dismantle - they can take hours!
It's not what you play, it's not how you play. It's the fact that you're playing that counts.

www.andrew-gilbert.com