I thought of that after I posted - I realised that the transformer coils may have a low resistance (a few ohms or less), and may appear to be ZERO with a meter that was not so sensitive. They may perhaps show a difference with a sensitive enough meter. Although it doesn't really matter, nowBTW graham, I did take resistance measurements for the wires earlier today, but neglected to mention them in my post because all the pins registered 0 ohms resistance relative to any other pin.

Manufacturers will always try and cut the price of maufacturing where they can. It's my guess that it's much cheaper for a company to order a million generic 10V AC transformers with no other guts in them but the transformer coils, and then build the regulation circuit onto the one whole EMX PCB that a production line robot can do very cheaply, instead of having to design and build 1 million separate regulator circuit boards and install them in the power pack or buy specially made DC power packs from another manufacturer.So, graham, why would korg use an AC power supply just to do a shitty AC-DC conversion inside the x-tribe? Seems like a waste of energy to me
Alesis were one of the first companies to go down this line. They designed equipment so that as much as possible was built directly onto the PCB, so they could cut down production costs and therefore undercut competitors with the shop price. Quite clever, really. But very annoying, for hackers like us

Cheers, graham