[sdiy] triangle to sine converter

Tom May tom at tommay.net
Fri Oct 11 05:08:04 CEST 2002


What you've got there is a curve made out of parabola pieces.  Running
the triangle through an integrator will do this.  An integrator is
just a low pass filter.  Your output amplitude will be inversely
proportional to frequency, which won't make a very good tri-sine
converter unless you tune the filter simultaneously with your
oscillator.

Tom.

Using Mozilla 4.79, Seb Francis <seb at is-uk.com> writes:

> <!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en">
> <html>
> Hi,
> <p>I was working out how to generate a sine wave LFO in my MIDI2CV converter
> without wasting loads of PIC CPU on floating point maths routines, and
> I managed to work out the following simple algorithm (written in tcl -
> great language for quickly trying out ideas):
> <p>set dy 0
> <br>set ddy 1
> <p>set y 0
> <br>set t 0
> <br>while {$t <= 100} {
> <br>    incr y $dy
> <br>    incr dy $ddy
> <br>    if {$dy >= 10 || $dy <= -10} {
> <br>        set ddy [expr {0 - $ddy}]
> <br>    }
> <p>    set valueAtTimeT($t) $y
> <br>    incr t
> <br>}
> <p>This produces what _looks_ like a perfect sine wave (see gif below),
> and it got me thinking about analog triangle to sine converters. 
> Basically the above algorithm increments "y" by the level of a triangle
> wave ("dy" is following a triangle wave pattern, symmetrical about 0). 
> That is to say the gradient of a sine wave is a triangle wave about 0. 
> I'm not sure that this sounds totally right to me (although the result
> looks like a sine) - I don't remember enough maths from school unfortunately.
> <p>Now isn't the rate of voltage change (voltage gradient) across a capacitor
> proportional to the current charging/discharging it?  So a triangle
> wave through a resistor, into a transistor-pair current mirror, charging/discharging
> a capacitor would produce a perfect sine wave.
> <p>Does this work?  I can't remember ever seeing a triangle to sine
> converter circuit like this.
> <p>Just some ramblings of my brain ... ;-)
> <p>Seb
> <br> 
> <p><img SRC="cid:part1.3DA610ED.432086F0 at is-uk.com" height=190 width=600></html>



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