Jim,
Take a cheap patch cord, remove one of the plugs, and connect the signal (center
wire) to the V-Input and the ground (sheild) to the ground below the V-input. You
should be able to get the waveform to display if you fiddle with the input level and
timebase. It is fun to watch the scope a time or two and see the effects of filters
on a waveform but beyond that, it isn't very interesting.
A useful application for a scope in the studio can be found at:
http://www.creativesynth.com/Features/SecretBox/feat_SecretBox_1.htmlUsing both the X and Y inputs of the scope to show phase relationships can be very
handy when mixing.
Eric
---
bigw@... wrote:
> Hello everyone, i pick up a old cheap oscillascope to put my MOTM through,
> http://www.teklab.com/~weld/pix/eicoosc.jpg
> it has no probes, so i was wondering how you all would connect to the motm? I
> would just like to see the final waveform on the scope.
> Thx
> Jim
>
> thomas white wrote:
>
> > Hello all,
> >
> > I recently bought a little $20 Korg chromatic tuner to calibrate/tune my 300
> > VCO's with. Let me say this thing works great for this job!!! My MOTM sounds
> > so in tune it scares me now. What a way to discover how tone deaf you
> > actually are when trying to use only your ear. Now I get the slowly beating
> > lead I wanted all the way up the keyboard and not just in a 2 octave range.
> > Highly recommend proper 1v/oct tuning!
> >
> > Thomas White
> >
> > PS. No resistor change either.
> >
> > >From: "Dave Bradley" <daveb@...>
> > >Reply-To: motm@egroups.com
> > >To: motm@egroups.com
> > >Subject: [motm] Re: MOTM-300 and cheerleaders
> > >Date: Tue, 15 Aug 2000 01:31:31 -0000
> > >
> > >--- In motm@egroups.com, "thomas white" <djthomaswhite@h...> wrote:
> > > > Hey fellas,
> > > >
> > > > I have noticed in my two VCO system that when I use the transpose
> > >switch on
> > > > my Roland M-181 keyboard or play higher up in scale thru my Kenton
> > >that the
> > > > VCO's do start to sound flat or slightly off key. Especially one
> > >compared to
> > > > the other.
> > >
> > >A little detective work is in order here before you blame your 300s.
> > >
> > >First, it's hard to please 2 masters, so to speak. Your Kenton and
> > >Roland may be calibrated slightly differently. If so, you will be
> > >able to calibrate your 300s to play in tune with one or the other,
> > >but not both.
> > >
> > >Second, the Roland may track fairly accurately when you play the
> > >keyboard, only to introduce errors when you use the octave switches.
> > >
> > >If the 2 vcos track differently than each other using the same
> > >source, you need to calibrate them as closely as possible.
> > >
> > >If they stay in tune with each other in the low mid range, but get
> > >further out of tune in the higher range, you may have one that needs
> > >the high frequency tracking resistor change that Paul mentioned. The
> > >problem with only 2 vcos is that it may be hard to tell which one is
> > >tracking correctly, and which one is not linear.
> > >
> > >My fave calibration technique is to beat a tracking vco against a
> > >nontracking drone vco. Hendry likes to feed the drone into the 120 to
> > >get exact suboctaves, so you can do close comparisons over many
> > >octaves.
> > >
> > >Moe
> > >
> >
> > ________________________________________________________________________
> > Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com
> >
>
>
>
>
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail - Free email you can access from anywhere!
http://mail.yahoo.com/