No they didn't and that's the problemsheaf wrote: Sun Sep 21, 2025 5:21 am
But they recreated the DX7 algo, exactly. There just is no other way to do it.
But I am not asking for 4 feedback loops again all I am looking to do what is drawn in red and that is to use not 4 but three feedback loopsYou're asking for 4 feedback loops so that's not possible no matter how you slice it.
In the original DX7 Algo there was only one Feedback loop and that was operator 3 fedback to itself. The DX7 only had one feedback loop available
If in the SY that Algo had been duplicated exactly I could easily do what I want because I could just move that from Operator 3 to Operator 6, and then use the two others to connect 1&2 with 5
But the Yamaha engineers didn't recreate that Algo 100% exactly the same. If they had the output from 3 would have just been duplicated between 1&2 but instead they wasted a feedback loop and used that to connect 3&1. That's the green line in my drawing which is just recreating the line Yamaha used in the onscreen graphics to highlight this
So to recap and finally put this to rest once and for all
1.)The DX7 is not using a feedback loop to connect 1&3
2.)The SY77 is using a feedback loop to connect 1&3
So no the algorithm was not recreated exactly. If it had there would not be that feedback loop between 1&3
As a result there is actually a rather significant difference in how it was done. That difference doesn't matter if all you are trying to do is recreate a specific DX7 patch
However because they didn't recreate it exactly it causes an issue if you want to modify it and use the 3 available feedback loops to do anything else but connect 3 with 1 as Yamaha's engineers wasted feedback loop
One of the best features about the SY77/TG77 was that you had the 3 feedback loops that were very flexible and easy to use. You could load an algorithm and then go to the Feedback Matrix Page which was easy to use and get to and modify or create 3 extra connections between whatever operators you want. This could radically alter and create new algorithms without having to use Sysex and make new ones from scratch. Having a single Modulator modulate two different operators with a single non feedback loop connection would have been a very powerful thing. It's just a shame that's not how Yamaha decided to do it
