Those Morely pedals are really great. I have a 22 year old Morely SVOL that I need
to bring back from the dead one of these days. It probably just needs a new bulb.
I've even used the SVOL to attenuate control voltages. It works just like a pot.
For an emusic class in college I used a Moog ribbon controller like a fretless bass
guitar, with the SVOL controling the VCF cutoff - fun stuff!
Eric
--- "joe.pavone" <
fuzztone@...> wrote:
> The good old fasioned Morley volume pedals have light bulbs and a photoresistor
> and that's just about it. Inside, the pedal mechanism drapes a small black velvet
> curtian in front of the light bulb to vary the amount of light hitting the
> photoresistor. When I recently changed the bulb in one of these it got me thinking
> along the same lines. It would be fun to alter my MOTM patch from across the room
> with a flashlight....
>
> ....jp
> _______________________________________________________________________________
>
> >From: motm@egroups.com on Mon, Jul 3, 2000 2:10 AM
> >Subject: [motm] "Light Plug"
> >To: MOTM
> >
> >At the recent NYC meeting, RevTor had a couple of the LED jacks (they
> >light up when signal is present) that were discussed a few months ago on
> >the list. Today, reading Keyboard magazine, I came across a review of the
> >"Lovetone Ringstinger" effects pedal. One paragraph caught my eye:
> >
> >"The unit ships with a "light plug", a 1/4" plug with a photoresistor in
> >the plastic housing. By inserting the light plug into one of the
> >Ringstinger's external pedal jacks and changing the amount of light
> >hitting the photoresistor, you can sweep either the LFO depth or VCO
> >frequency."
> >
> >Seems like something similar might be a simple, interesting controller
> >for MOTM, or any other CV synth. Would this work?
> >
> >nathan
>
>
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