[sdiy] 566 , was Re: Midwest Analog Product Books

Scott Stites scottnoanh at peoplepc.com
Mon Sep 27 20:14:14 CEST 2004


The 566 VCO chip is used by TH for percussion circuits, driving noise
generators, etc.

John - can't remember off-hand, and no time to check (I'm fixin' to take off
for California), but if you increase the timing cap, doesn't that enable
lower frequencies where the waveform hangs together, thus making it useful
as an LFO?

Take care,
Scott

----- Original Message -----
From: "john mahoney" <jmahoney at gate.net>
To: <synth-diy at dropmix.xs4all.nl>
Cc: "Roy J. Tellason" <rtellason at blazenet.net>
Sent: Monday, September 27, 2004 7:40 AM
Subject: [sdiy] 566 , was Re: Midwest Analog Product Books


> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Roy J. Tellason" <rtellason at blazenet.net>
>
>
> > On Sunday 26 September 2004 08:05 pm, john mahoney wrote:
> > > I bought Thomas Henry's 566 book because I ended up with some of
> those
> > > oft-maligned chips in some grab bags. (Not 556, not 565, but the
> > > obsolete 566 VCO/Function Generator.)
> >
> > Speaking of which,  I got one of those chips too,  in a similar
> situation --
> > in a bag of miscellaneous parts.  What's it good for?
>
> Short answer: a sound effects box like the old Paia Gnome. Runners up:
> a VCO or *maybe* a VC-LFO.
>
> It sort of depends on whether you are using it the according to the
> datasheet or with Thomas Henry's tricks. The specs say: 10-to-1
> frequency range; inverted, linear voltage response; square and
> triangle waves with strange peak-to-peak levels.
>
> With TH's tips you can get this: 1000:1 freq range; temperature
> compensated, 1V/octave response; hard sync; suboctave square wave;
> square, pulse, triangle, sine, and quadrature square wave outputs at
> standard synth levels. You can choose to have a ramp instead of tri
> (and sine).
>
> However, while TH reveals how to do all this he writes that "if ultra
> precision is your goal... there are more effective ways of designing
> an exponential VCO for synth work."
>
> The quadrature outputs made me think "Great for an LFO!"
> Unfortunately, though, the triangle wave doesn't hold together at
> frequencies below 80 Hertz. I'm not sure how low the square waves can
> go, although TH's books shows 10Hz with a -6V input. If it'll go even
> lower then it may be useful as an LFO.
>
> One person on the Synth-DIY list said he'd built a 566-based VCO and
> it was pretty good, much better than the naysayers were, um,
> naysaying. ;-P
>
> But for me? My crystal ball shows a few sound effects gadgets in my
> future.
> --
> john
>
>




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