Ken Shirriff Reverse Engineers Yamaha's Classic YM21280 OPS Chip — the Heart of the Yamaha DX7 Synth

Taken from a deceased DX7, this metal-lidded ceramic chip gives up its secrets — through over a hundred microscope images.

Gareth Halfacree
2 years agoRetro Tech / Music

Noted computer historian and reverse engineer Ken Shirriff has turned his attentions to the Yamaha DX7 digital synth from the 1980s — reverse engineering the operation of its YM21280 OPS operator chip from high-resolution die imagery.

"The Yamaha DX7 digital synthesizer was released in 1983 and became 'one of the most important advances in the history of modern popular music,'" Shirriff writes. "It defined the sound of 1980s pop music, used by bands from A-ha and Michael Jackson to Dolly Parton and Whitney Houston. The DX7's electric piano sound can be heard in over 40% of 1986's top hits."

To dive deeper into exactly how the device worked, Shirriff removed the metal cover from a YM21280 OPS chip — the so-called "operator" chip, one of two key custom chips in the synth alongside the YM21290 EGS "envelope" chip — and took over a hundred images of the silicon through a microscope. By compositing these, Shirriff created a high-resolution image of the circuitry — offering clues at how the 64-pin quad in-line package (QIP) did what it did.

"The shift registers are the largest blocks of the chip, especially the phase shift registers in the upper left," Shirriff explains of his discoveries. "ROMs are the second-largest blocks, especially the sine ROM and the two identical exponential ROMs. Adders provide most of the logic circuitry; there isn't much 'random' logic compared to a processor chip, for instance. The chip has several bit shifters that shift a numeric value, multiplying or dividing it by a power of two."

"Studying the chip's die reveals some interesting circuits. Uncovering the secrets of how the chip operates may help build more accurate DX7 emulators. The chip is complex and this article just scratches the surface so I plan to study the chip in more detail. In particular, I intend to extract the data from the ROMs to find out exactly how the waveforms are represented."

Shirriff's full write-up, which goes into the DX7's operation and looks at the shift registers, ROMs, adders, bit shifters, and underlying algorithm in considerable detail, is now available on his website.

Gareth Halfacree
Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.
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