[sdiy] Michael Barton?

Nicholas Keller niroke at tampabay.rr.com
Fri Nov 7 05:38:56 CET 2014


I've got a few TH "cookbooks", actually the noise book is right here next to me on the couch. Perhaps this is in the 3080 or 555 books, in which case I can have a look.  Thanks for the reminder, but if I can buy a ready made PCB, I'd probably prefer that.  The hand drawn and etched ones I've made in the past were a bit of effort and some didn't work in the end, for whatever reason.  Maybe I've learned enough now to trouble-shoot those attempts.  Still have them, if I can figure out what circuits they are.  I tried to label everything as I went, but some are mysteries 

Nick



> On Nov 6, 2014, at 11:19 PM, Pete Hartman <pete.hartman at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> On Thu, Nov 6, 2014 at 9:26 PM, Nicholas Keller <niroke at tampabay.rr.com> wrote:
>> Right, the Delaying AR is perfect for delayed vibrato and seems to be a rarity in most manufacturers catalogs.   So many synths have delayed vibrato, yet so few modular companies make such a simple enough module for the job. My large mostly Doepfer system can't do it easily, if at all, since my trigger delays don't reset when notes are played faster than the delay time.  The only way I can think to do it is using a comparator and another AR/ADSR to create a delayed gate to trigger yet another ASR for the vibrato...
>> 
>> Seems to me that the world should be screaming out for a delayed ASR module with built-in LFO (sine, Tri, hyper-Tri, or whatever is best for vibrato) and linear VCA.  Everything needed and normalled for delayed vibrato, but still patchable so you can use the ASR, LFO or VCA elsewhere in a pinch.
> 
> While you're looking around, Thomas Henry's LFOs usually have this
> feature, the ability to do delayed vibrato, including the Controller
> LFO that Fonik/Matthias Hermann has been selling.



More information about the Synth-diy mailing list