[sdiy] Linear detuning !
JH.
jhaible at debitel.net
Thu Aug 4 02:39:22 CEST 2005
> Lurking a lot these days.
Hi Gene - nice to see you're among us.
As far as I understand it, what you're describing is another trick to make
VCO pairs sound
richer: slightly misadjust the tracking (V/oct scale), and then (partially)
compensate
this by detuning. With this, you have two degrees of freedom, so you can
also
set your desired beat rate for two different notes - a high note and a low
note,
if you like. However, the behaviour in _between_ (change of beat rate
accross the
keyboard) is much different than with my method.
A third method would be running the whole (V/Oct) CV thru a waveshaper that
bends the response of the VCO ever so slightly.
JH.
>
> Hey, so, here's a thought that I want to toss out about linear detuning
> without even thinking about it very much (kind of a fun thing to do
> sometimes)...
>
> If linear detune means one osc tracks perfectly at
250Hz/500Hz/1000Hz/2000Hz
> etc., and the linear detuned one tracks at 251Hz/501Hz/1001Hz/2001Hz etc.,
> would that not be the same thing as tuning the 2nd osc slightly sharp and
> attenuating the pitch cv a tiny bit relative to the same cv that drives
osc
> 1?
>
> Offered for your consideration
>
> - Gene
>
>
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