Paul.
i love this encoder pots idea,yes they do sound like the best choice
for a sequencer but they do cost LOTS of mony ,so:
may be you should think of two deferent perpouse sequencer.
1)the most chipe (i meen real chipe) sequencer 16/2 with the worse
pots you can find ,this sequencer would ONLY serve as a programer
of action in the system.
open/close of events just like the mute buton on the softwere sequencers.
it can allso be used for lots of non critical aplication in a system
and ther are lots of this aplication.
make it a 100$ sequencer in we are happy.
2)the second sequencer would be the "player machine".
it would be a 8/2 sequencer built with the great encoders and would
only be used for controling VCO'S, VCF'S or other 1V/OCT units.
but wait ther thats not all,ther should be a smart quantizer built
in the sequencer and a coperator and an acurate glide which is
triger by a toggle switch or an input.
the out put frome the encoder's are binery so a quantizer is the
right element to recive this codes and out put a voltage.
allso this quantizer should have an input so you could patch
in other stuff LFO,ADSR or the chipe sequencer.
allso make a pulse addres and other intresting inputs
and function's UP/DOWN ,RESET,PLENDIUOM,may be a digital memory bla bla
bla....
make it a 500$ sequencer and we done.
thanx
Gur Milstein
At 07:25 PM 4/3/99 -0600, you wrote:
>From: "Paul Schreiber" <synth1@...>
>
>A standard cheap seq uses cheap pots from +5 to ground to get the CV out.
>Problems are as follows
>
>a) It can be hard to tune to a exact note over a 5 octave range with a cheap
>pot
>b) they drift with temperature. Since they are used ratiometric this is
>minimized to a degree.
>
>What I am looking at is a Greyhill optical encoder. It is small, like the
>black Spectrol pots I use now. It
>is sealed. It outputs 256 pulses per revolution, nice and clean. And, (this
>is the SEX part) it has a built-in
>pushbutton integrated with the shaft! You push the shaft in about 1/16" and
>it clicks like a mouse button!
>If fact, this is the model they used: spin the knob, and click to set the
>value. I LOVE this stuff!!
>
>Of course, it is NOT cheap. If I buy 500 at a time, the cost to ME is about
>$14 each. YEP! $14 EACH!!!!!!
>
>But they are good for 5 MILLION rotations and the built-in button is just to
>cool for words.
>
>Paul S.
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Gur Milstein <gur-m@...>
>To: motm@onelist.com <motm@onelist.com>
>Date: Saturday, April 03, 1999 6:34 PM
>Subject: [motm] Re: MOTM up date
>
>
>>From: Gur Milstein <gur-m@...>
>>
>>Paul.
>>please explain more about the sequencer desighn problem,why would
>>quality components would make an analog sequencer better ?
>>is it only the pots drift problem or are ther any other importent
>>aspects ?
>>
>>thanx
>>Gur Milstein
>>
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