[sdiy] 2164 Expo correction

Scott Gravenhorst music.maker at gte.net
Mon Mar 28 03:37:20 CEST 2011


Small errors give instruments character...

"David G. Dixon" <dixon at interchange.ubc.ca> wrote:
>> Might it be possible to feed the pin from a negative 
>> impedence buffer/amplifier, tuned to cancel out the effect of 
>> the 450 Ohms?
>
>Well, the NIC is definitely very cool (and a little bit strange), but it's
>not really what I need here.
>
>I've now measured the frequency-VC response of three separate 2164s in the
>same circuit, and I also re-measured the third chip in Class A mode (7.5k
>from 15V to the MODE pin).  Based on these measurements, a clearer picture
>is beginning to emerge.
>
>First, there is a range of frequencies where the exponential gain is
>virtually flat: between about 64 and 512 Hz.  In my circuit, this
>corresponds to 1V/O CVs of about -5V to -2V.  Above this level (at high
>frequencies), the required voltage begins to increase, and I think this is
>mostly due to comparator delays in the VCO core.  Below this level (at low
>frequencies), the required voltage drops off slightly.  This, I believe, is
>the nonlinearity of the exponential response in the 2164.  Happily, all the
>chips I tested behave pretty consistently.
>
>Second, the average gain factor in the midrange (where the response was more
>or less flat) is about 182 mV/octave -- decidedly less than 200mV/octave as
>advertised.
>
>Third, running the 2164 in Class A mode increases the required voltages
>across the entire range by about 3 to 5 mV, but doesn't change the basic
>shape of the response.
>
>On the basis of all this, and considering what a pain in the ass calibration
>would be with the additional JFET-based correction scheme, I think I'm going
>to go with my design as is, tune to the frequency range around 256 Hz, use
>the BJT-based correction scheme to pull up the high frequencies, and live
>with the small tracking errors in the low bass, where they are less obvious.
>I may drop the reference frequency from 2kHz to 1kHz (by doubling the
>voltage-to-current-converting resistor in the VCO core) to increase the
>range of decent tracking down another octave, depending on how "happy" I am
>with the final tuning.
>

-- ScottG




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