[sdiy] Tuneable CV Quantizer

John L Marshall john.l.marshall at gte.net
Fri Sep 28 04:50:34 CEST 2001


Again, I like the idea of 64 comparators with adjustable input thresholds
and 64 pots to set the output level.

You can do Harry Partch music with 43 notes per octave.

Feed an up ramp in and you can do the sequencer thing.

Feed a down ramp in and the sequencer runs backwards.

Feed a triangle in and the sequencer runs upand down.

Lower the amplitude and the sequence shortens.

With the pots you can create quantization errors (backward steps).

Real synthesizers have lots of pot.


----- Original Message -----
From: Steve Ridley <spr at spridley.freeserve.co.uk>
To: <synth-diy at dropmix.xs4all.nl>
Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2001 12:46 PM
Subject: Re: [sdiy] Tuneable CV Quantizer


>
> > I am currently trying to figure out a way to build a tuneable quantizer
so
> I
> > can get non-standard tunnings and that type of thing. Does anyone know
> > of anything like this that is around yet that I can maybe hunt the
> schematics
> > down for, or any ideas on how I could make this work.  I have not had
much
> > luck trying to figure this one out yet, any help would be appreciated.
>
> The Buchla 246 Sequencer could double as a sort of quantiser.  It had
> voltage selection of stage, so you stick a CV in there and the output
> steps between the pot settings.  If you're going to have a quantiser with
> loads of pots, it makes sense that it can double as a sequencer.
>
>
> Steve Ridley
>
>
>




More information about the Synth-diy mailing list