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I moved this comment from the end of the article to the talkpage. Sietse 13:51, 8 Apr 2005 (UTC)
//The above fact about the Famicom game Langrange Point is not correct. That game uses a chip known as the VRC7, which (I believe) was developed by Konami in-house and used in other Famicom games, such as Castlevania III (Japanese Famicom version only). It is NOT the YM2413. The VRC7 and the YM2413 both use FM synthesis, and both sound very similar, however, that's where the similarities end. If someone wants to edit the page, and make the correction I've mentioned, it would be appreciated. Otherwise leave this message here. (VRC7 needs its own page by the way, as it has a cult following.)\\ - EchoMorphsapient
--- Recently it was discovered that the official YM2413 Application Manual has an error in the circuit reference design, and many implementations copied this reference design. The error results in a muffled/dull sound. See here for how to fix this issue: https://www.msx.org/news/en/ym2413-application-manual-correction-and-cleanup Should this be mentioned on the main page? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.222.47.226 ( talk) 13:10, 18 August 2017 (UTC)
Yamaha PSS-140 contains a YM2420, which is a variant with slightly changed registers, used in Yamaha's own home keyboards (intentionally undocumented to avoid hardware piracy). Also SHS-10, SHS-200, VSS-200 used that chip. (Possibly earlier versions of these keyboards indeed had an YM2413.) - CYBERYOGI =CO=Windler 92.196.11.88 ( talk) 01:00, 25 September 2017 (UTC)
It's a small point but I can't seem to find any contemporary reference to these before 1987. Are we sure they're from 1986? the source of these claims seems to be a throw away comment from the 8-bit keys guy, but i can't find anything in writing. Mechafatnick ( talk) 07:03, 14 March 2021 (UTC)
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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I moved this comment from the end of the article to the talkpage. Sietse 13:51, 8 Apr 2005 (UTC)
//The above fact about the Famicom game Langrange Point is not correct. That game uses a chip known as the VRC7, which (I believe) was developed by Konami in-house and used in other Famicom games, such as Castlevania III (Japanese Famicom version only). It is NOT the YM2413. The VRC7 and the YM2413 both use FM synthesis, and both sound very similar, however, that's where the similarities end. If someone wants to edit the page, and make the correction I've mentioned, it would be appreciated. Otherwise leave this message here. (VRC7 needs its own page by the way, as it has a cult following.)\\ - EchoMorphsapient
--- Recently it was discovered that the official YM2413 Application Manual has an error in the circuit reference design, and many implementations copied this reference design. The error results in a muffled/dull sound. See here for how to fix this issue: https://www.msx.org/news/en/ym2413-application-manual-correction-and-cleanup Should this be mentioned on the main page? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.222.47.226 ( talk) 13:10, 18 August 2017 (UTC)
Yamaha PSS-140 contains a YM2420, which is a variant with slightly changed registers, used in Yamaha's own home keyboards (intentionally undocumented to avoid hardware piracy). Also SHS-10, SHS-200, VSS-200 used that chip. (Possibly earlier versions of these keyboards indeed had an YM2413.) - CYBERYOGI =CO=Windler 92.196.11.88 ( talk) 01:00, 25 September 2017 (UTC)
It's a small point but I can't seem to find any contemporary reference to these before 1987. Are we sure they're from 1986? the source of these claims seems to be a throw away comment from the 8-bit keys guy, but i can't find anything in writing. Mechafatnick ( talk) 07:03, 14 March 2021 (UTC)