OK, I just took a few measurements on two of my 300s and here is what I found: I had two VCOs set up on the exact same frequency. I used the FM2 input as it is linear only. Of course, the FM2 attenuator is on 100% It took 0.507 volts on my meter to get an octave shift up or down, when compared to the VCO with no shift. It took twice that, 1.014 volts to get two. VERY linear of course. The same voltage applied negatively produced the same interval in the opposite direction. Exactly what we expected from MOTM. I swapped the voltage (once dialed in) that produced one octave shift on one VCO and plugged it to the other. Yes, you guessed it. They same voltage produced the exact same shift on both. The octave switch you planned would need to put out multiples of 0.507 volts per octave shift desired if using the FM2 input (that's my 300s, your milage may vary). This is one hell of a good idea that has my thoughts of modifying my 300 going right in the toilet (where they probably belonged to start with). Thanks Nathan Larry Hendry
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Re: More Osc Controller
2000-03-16 by J. Larry Hendry
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