Hi!
Oooooo, sorry, Mr. Hooke (May I call you Meat?) - the VCOs in the
Polysix are ∗discrete∗, linear (Hz/Volt) items. Since you're a member
of the Yahoo Groups Polysix club, I believe that they have a schematic
posted (or directions to one), indicating this. If not, I can tell you
that it's in my Polysix Service Manual. Just a few transistors, etc.,
making a saw/pulse VCO. Sadly, they're not 1V/Octave, as with so many
other machines of the time, so it's not easy to interface 'em -
Basically, you need MIDI to do that.
There a a couple of nice MIDI interfaces available, depending upon how
deep your pockets are. There's an Austrian company that offers a
bare-bones interface for less than $200 USD, and an Austro/Swedish duo
that has a full, comprehensive interface for about $400 USD. More
information should be available at the many Polysix websites - Just
Google 'em! :-D
It really is a fine machine, capable of many different sounds. And,
for a single-VCO machine, it's pretty flexible too, thanks to the
built-in chorus/phase/ensemble, and arpeggiator.
OK - My two cents worth. Please feel free to flame/argue/support --
whatever. Thanks for the bandwidth!
Dave Garfield, Polysix owner
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--- meathooke <
meathooke@aol.com> wrote:
> Okay...So the vcf's in this thing are ssm 2044's and the eg's are ssm
>
> 2056's......Does anyone have a clue what the vco chips are?
> -Meathook
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