(Not) Fixing a Zoom Studio 1201 Effects Unit

Zoom Studio 1201 effects unit

I recently bought an allegedly-broken rackmount audio effects processor on eBay, described by the seller thusly:

ZOOM STUDIO 1201

DIGITAL REVERB & MULTI EFFECTS

Powers On but no sound on output

It sounded like an interesting problem — maybe a bad jack or pot, or of course possibly a bad DSP or custom chip that I wouldn’t be able to fix — but worth $10 plus shipping to give it a shot. I was the only bidder; and after a long delay (one of the advertised features of the unit, but not one I expected from the seller) it was mine.

The first thing I noticed is that it did not, in fact, power on. The minimal instruction sheet says that the Peak LED goes green to indicate power and red to indicate peak / clipping; and mine remained off. So the unit did not, in any sense in which I’m familiar with the term, “power on.”

I checked the wall wart, thinking it might be faulty. It appears not to be the original power supply for this unit (see the verbiage at the bottom of the label — not, to my knowledge, synonymous with “audio effects processor”), but did deliver 9VDC.

9VDC wall wart supplied with Zoom Studio 1201 effects unit

Ah, but not the right 9VDC.

Zoom Studio 1201 power jack

The replacement power supply had the wrong polarity. Thus I was even more puzzled as to in what sense this unit could have been considered to “power on,” unless the seller had the correct power supply while posting the unit for sale but delivered a different one.

I checked my wall wart bin but didn’t have a suitable replacement. So for testing, I used a few jumper wires and a passive auto power adapter with the same barrel connector to reverse the polarity:

Powering Zoom Studio 1201 with wrong wall wart and jumper wires

And voila! Green power light. Maybe “powers on” means “with considerable effort.”

Having tested that it was worth the trouble — that the unit hadn’t been completely blown by reversed polarity — I cut and soldered the wall wart’s cable back together to deliver the correct polarity for this unit. (Mental note: I forgot to update the diagram on the wall wart — need to go back and do that.)

I took it to my synth and inserted it between the synth and powered speaker to test whether “powers on” now equated to “works completely,” and alas, it did not. The input trim pot works and impacts the output volume; the output volume control works and impacts the output volume; but no other controls have any effect. It’s as though I’m constantly getting a “dry” mix.

Zoom Studio 1201 PCB

I tested the wet/dry pot in circuit, and it does vary resistance continuously over its range, so it doesn’t appear to be the problem. I tested the foot pedal effects override jack with both my meter and a spare plug, and it doesn’t appear to be faulty — and the instruction sheet says disabling effects with the foot switch will make the Peak light will go amber, which isn’t happening. I touched up the solder joints on one of the effect selector switches, and no difference. Still the “dry” sound coming straight through to the output.

Particularly puzzling to me is that the Reverb Effects selector (which is a pot with detents rather than a position encoder — evidently an A/D input was cheaper than four digital inputs) causes a brief dropout of output as it’s rotated between positions; so something appears to be talking through the digital guts of the beast. But no matter the setting, I still get the dry output.

I should note that the effects bank selector switch, although physically broken, is still electrically functional — moving it to the different positions with a small screwdriver does provide continuity among different sets of contacts on the back.

I realize now that I’ve only been testing the left channel so far, as it doubles as the mono channel. I should try testing the right channel in case something in the signal path is only broken on the left.

Anyway, at the moment I differ slightly with the seller: powers on when you hook it up right, original sound on output, but no effects.

7 Responses to “(Not) Fixing a Zoom Studio 1201 Effects Unit”

  1. Eric says:

    LOL, that power supply is PRICELESS.

  2. TK says:

    I will be interested to see if you can get this one running. I have seen quite a few “AS-IS” sales on eBay that I’ve been tempted to jump into, but haven’t yet. Seems like there is a fair amount of equipment you can get cheaply if you are willing to spend some time with it…

  3. Paul Woodward says:

    Please keep us updated on this as I would be very interested to see your progress on this project.

  4. William says:

    Good find. Sad to think though, some poor woman’s pump probably doesn’t “power on”.

  5. ketas says:

    Breast pump PSU :P Can’t be any funnier.

    I’m wondering how that one even came near to some rack-mounted audio stuff.

  6. Eric says:

    The seller probably has a box of old power supplies laying around. I tend to keep them off of anything I throw away. It was probably tested with one of them in hos box, and then when he shipped the item, he threw in a totally different one. Sounds like he is a surplus seller.

  7. Kruno says:

    Hi Keith, same as you I bet on one 1201 that was for spares and the same fault is showing. No effects in action at all, only signal thru. Did you manage to locate the schematics or identify the fault since?
    Thanks for anything you can contribute with,
    Kruno

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