Equivalent Resistor Ladder Boss DD-2

Started by aviherman5, January 29, 2023, 11:34:21 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

aviherman5

Hi all,

I'm looking for help to find an equivalent to this part: RKM14L492-103F. It comes from a Boss guitar pedal (DD-2) and the service manual (https://www.synthxl.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Boss-DD2-DD3-Service-Notes.pdf) says it is an "R-2R ladder network"

I took it out and measured the connections from pin 1 to all the others, and they started at ~10k and went up in ~5k increments until the second to last which was ~65k and the last one was also ~65k.

Does anyone have an idea what an equivalent part might be? What are some search terms that would guarantee I find one on Mouser?

Thanks!

GGBB

  • SUPPORTER

PRR

#2
You can see the insides in context in the SDE-1000/3000 repair notes (PDF page 17):

https://www.vintagesynthparts.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/SDE-1000_SDE-3000_SERVICE_NOTES.pdf
(same designer?)
With Gord's help you can probably pencil-in values in the right places.
(I never remember which is R and which is 2R.)
I think the Bourns pinout is different from the one BOSS used?)
I don't see any on offer.
I think you can roll yer own with a fistful of 10k resistors (two series for 2R). One nice thing about R-2R DACs is no exxtreme ratios and no critical matching. Common 1% may even be "too good" but a few inches of parts-tape won't cost much.

Ah, no, a 12-bit R2R DAC needs the MSB resistors far-far better than 1%.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resistor_ladder

  • SUPPORTER

Rob Strand

#3
Do a search on:
precision R2R 12-bit

Suppose you targeted +/-0.01% tolerance.   For a 10k resistor that's +/-1 ohm.

The point is if you have chip driving the R2R ladder then the switches/gates resistance need to be matched to less than +/-1 ohm in order not to impact on the overall tolerance.   You will find a lot of chips aren't that good.   So the chip resistance matching can end up having more effect than the resistor array.
Send:     . .- .-. - .... / - --- / --. --- .-. -
According to the water analogy of electricity, transistor leakage is caused by holes.

aviherman5