[sdiy] Fully assignable sequencer
Ken Stone
sasami at hotkey.net.au
Wed Jul 11 01:11:20 CEST 2007
Binary thumbwheel switches. Diode OR gated from the outputs into a 4 bit
R/2R D/A converter, driven by a 4017 or similar.
Ken
>The Niessen is using rotary *encoders*, so there's not much in the way
>of wiring. I wouldn't want to try it with rotary switches unless they
>were pcb mounted. For quantized voltages to supply to the switches, it
>would be easy to design a resistive divider/current source like those
>used in old analog cv based keyboards to generate the inputs to the
>switches, and then use an analog mux to generate the cv out. The
>mux/control logic could be similar to any number of old sequencer
>designs. A cross-bred keyboard/sequencer. Hmmm...maybe not such a bad
>idea...
>
>-Dave
>
>Scott wrote:
>> Those rotary switches are a great idea, but looks like it would be a LOT
>> of work to wire up. Has there been discussion here about how to do
>> something like that?
>> The surplus store in town had a box of little 12x1 rotary switches last
>> time I was there.. hmm.....
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> Subject: Re: [sdiy] Fully assignable sequencer
>>
>> And to be honest: the only commercial available HW sequencer which
>> produces real usable CVs for oscillator pitch in classic tonal music is
>> the Niessen SAM-16. No pots but switches..
>
>_______________________________________________
>Synth-diy mailing list
>Synth-diy at dropmix.xs4all.nl
>http://dropmix.xs4all.nl/mailman/listinfo/synth-diy
>
_______________________________________________________________________
Ken Stone sasami at hotkey.net.au
Modular Synth PCBs for sale <http://www.cgs.synth.net/>
Australian Miniature Horses & Ponies <http://www.blaze.net.au/~sasami/>
More information about the Synth-diy
mailing list