Korg EX-M1R

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  • Release Year: 1989
  • Polyphony: 16-voice, 16-oscillators (single-mode)
  • Timbrality: 8-part
  • Sequencer: 10 songs, 100 patterns, max. 7700 notes

The Korg EX-M1R is the rack version of the Legendary Korg M1 keyboard, its EX version.

The story

I acquired the Korg M1R-EX in January 2025 from a 20-year-old who claimed it belonged to a friend of his. It had been sitting in storage for years, and when his friend moved abroad, he left it with him. He gave it to me in non-working condition. Specifically, the display wouldn’t turn on and showed nothing.

As received

This display used two connectors: one with 5V exclusively for the backlight power and another for data (14 pins because the display was compatible with the Hitachi HD44780 controller) — this one also used 5V for digital communication. After a lot of troubleshooting, I discovered that the backlight connector had been plugged into the wrong slot, swapped with another connector. With this incorrect connection, the backlight was receiving -5V instead of +5V. After connecting them properly, the display lit up! However, it still didn’t show anything. Only the backlight was working.

A button on the front panel had been glued and secured with silicone, so I assume the previous owner attempted a repair, had to disassemble everything, and during reassembly, connected the connectors incorrectly.

The two swapped connectors

I believe this is a significant design flaw by the manufacturer, as the connectors should not be so easily interchangeable. Typically, connectors have different shapes or pin counts to prevent incorrect connections.

Continuing my investigation into why the display wasn’t showing anything, I found that one of the pins on the other connector, which controls the contrast of the LCD display, wasn’t receiving the necessary voltage. In the expected range of 0V to 5V, it was reading 0V. Since the synth seemed to boot up — pressing the buttons would light them up, meaning the device was responding — I guessed that the display might actually be working, but the contrast was set incorrectly.

Further investigation revealed that the reversed connector connection had caused excessive heat in one area of the circuit board, damaging the continuity of three traces. Unfortunately, I’m not a professional when it comes to repairing traces on circuit boards, so instead of fixing the traces, I simply bridged the relevant points with wires. With three wires connected to the correct spots, the synth finally worked normally!

Two of the three wire bridges

After that, I proceeded with the following steps:

  1. A thorough cleaning.
  2. Hardware reset (holding the “Int,” “Card,” and “Combi” buttons while powering on the device).
  3. In the MIDI settings, I enabled System Exclusive messages. By default, this setting is DISABLED to protect any existing configurations.
  4. I reloaded the factory presets using the Midi-OX software. The presets are different in the EX version.
Back to life!

Now it’s ready to be part of my future productions!

Downloads

coming soon…

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