[sdiy] Oberheim Xpander VCF

Paul Maddox paul.maddox.mail-list at synth.net
Thu Jan 15 21:19:49 CET 2009


Antti,

  you can indeed, and it doesn't have to be a "real" filter, it works  
with DSP filters too.
With the Monowave II and Phoenix apps I did for the Chameleon I did  
this.
take output after 1st pole, invert it... take output after fourth pole  
and cross fade between the two. In the middle you get a psuedo  
bandpass filter, but by doing the crossfade you can get a four pole  
filter with a bit more fizz and a bit less bottom.

   MonowaveII examples here -
http://www.vacoloco.net/synths/monowave2/sounds.shtml

  Just look for "pole sweep" or similar.

  I did the same in hardware for the Defender voice card, you can here  
the filter being controlled by the two LFOs on this page ;-
http://www.vacoloco.net/synths/defender/sounds.shtml

   It's a great way to obtain a very very flexible filter for very  
little extra work!

Paul

On 15 Jan 2009, at 15:10, Antti Huovilainen wrote:

> On Thu, 15 Jan 2009, George Hearn wrote:
>
>> I've been pointed in the direction of the Oberheim XPander VCF.  I  
>> think
>> it's quite incredible how 16 filter modes can come out of one  
>> filter.  Does
>> this not make it about the most versatile analogue filter design  
>> ever?
>
> You can get the same modes (and over a dozen more) from any 4 pole  
> cascaded RC style filter (Moog ladder, CEM, OTA etc).
>
> Antti
>
> "No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow"
>  -- Lt. Cmdr. Ivanova
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