--- In motm@y..., "tenorrusse" <tenorrusse@y...> wrote:
>
> could someone explain in simple terms what a wavewarper exactly does
> or perhaps post a link to a site that explains this - i've been
> looking for quite some while - thank you,
I think Paul has a pretty good description on the news page "basically
a small analog computer" - meaning that with this module you can
multiply waveforms, divide waveforms, raise to powers or take roots.
So here is something to think about:
A common "math function" in an analog synthesizer is the VCA where you
are essentially multiplying an "audio" waveform with a control
voltage. Another common operation is a ring modulator where you are
multiplying two "audio" waveforms. So you could do things like this
with an analog computer but, being a "generic" computational unit, you
can come up with other possibilities:
If you start with a pure tone (sine wave) and raise it to a power,
harmonics are added to that pure tone. If you were looking at the
waveform on an oscilloscope, the higher the power you rise to the more
"spiky" the sine wave will become. (It will start to look something
like a bell curve.) Alternately, if you were to raise to a fractional
power (take the root) the sine wave will start to "flatten out" - the
larger the root, the flatter the tops of the waveform. (In other
words, it will start to look like a square wave.) So in this example,
you have something of an "un-filter" module - adding harmonics instead
of removing them.
So Paul - is there an expectation as to cost of this 510 yet? It
seems useful - as in it would be cool to have more than one in a
system :)
Seth