As with alot of VC inputs which control a function that also has a maual control such as a pot, once a VC iis inserted, the pot acts like an offset to that external control. Pots can generate either a voltage or current based on how they are configured. If the specific function requires a voltage pot, then a VC can be added with the simple addition of a jack and a resistor. It's too easy to pass up, therefore it's done quite alot. For instance, all VCOs with Frequency pots (name one that doesn't have one of these!) and a VC frequency input is handled this way. Inside, these two are configured as a summer...think of it as a mixer, with the voltage-producing pot hardwired into one channel, and an external VC input into the other side. This is how the Morph, Frequency and PWM circuits operate on the M15. The pot is a voltage divider hardwired into one side of two input voltage mixer, the external VC input is the other. Since the pot produces a constant voltage (the specific level your wiper position dials up), that voltage serves as an offset to the VC input, which can if you want it ot be, be alternating - in motion. I scaled the pots on the M15 as I did purposely because the offset it produces with a VC input allows that input to have more control over the pulse width than if the pot wasn't configured that way. All the things you can do with the PWM input for instance when the pot is set outside the normal audible range would be unavailable. I found it to be unique and this was appealing to me. The problem lies not in the funtion of the pot, but the fact that I've not got off my ass and composed manuals for these instruments, which is criminal. I really need to do that. best, - P
Message
Re: model 15 morph question
2006-10-22 by (i think you can figure that out)
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.