> No it's not. Remember the local oscillator needs to span a range of 17
> octaves ( not far off from Paul's ultra VCO, and that VCO alone costs $349
> assembled. ) and so to get real calibrated CV, you'd need CV control of
all
> that. In reality, you could choose a small range, but since this has
> application far different than an oscillator, calibrated CV isn't very
> important. What are you calibrating anyway? You're taking an input
frequency
> spectrum and shifting it by X Hertz. As soon as you start to shift your
> entire harmonic relationship starts to get mangled, so really what's the
> point to CV control other than to allow modification of how "messed" up
> things are getting? Once you shift too far, things all sound basically
like
> chipmunks.
Calibrated V/Oct response adds one usefull application: Transposing the
shift oscillator in parallel with the VCOs (or whatever input sound). So
you can get the same (harmonic or non-harmonic) partials over the whole
keyboard range. Not a FS's most important function, but a nice one
nevertheless. See
http://home.t-online.de/home/jhaible/hj_fs.html (#1).
JH.