Well, I won't say I'm the last to get my VCOs going, but I didn't get in any hurry. I got them both powered up tonight and they seem to be doing what they are supposed to do. I set the V/Oct trimmer at 11.66K ohms as Paul indicated that was the "calculated" amount for correct V/Oct performance (yes, that was close to 12 turns from max). It is very close, and the tracking is already great before I have it completely dialed in. I'll get to that tomorrow. I am also very pleased with the tracking of the Kenton Pro2000 that I am using for my control of my MOTM. looking at about 7 octaves I found that the V/Oct actual voltage according to my Fluke 77 is within .02 volts across the range. I have not had an opportunity to try all the modulation stuff, but I have noticed a couple of things I will toss up for discussion or consideration. 1 - My FM1 switch position has some effect on pitch with the FM1 pot turned all the way down and nothing plugged into FM1 input. In the DC position, flipping the switch from EXP to LIN causes a shift in pitch. The same is true in the AC position, BUT to a much lesser degree. Actually, unless you have two oscillators fine tuned to the same frequency, you might not be able to hear the difference in the AC position. I certainly do not see this as a problem, since these switches will be left in one particular position if nothing is used in the FM1 input. However, I wondered if other's VCOs did the same (ie: am I normal?). 2 - I admit my ignorance to VCO sync. However, My hard/soft sync switch seems to be operating backward to my thinking (yes, I will check the wires again following sleep). In the soft position, my VCOs are dead locked. In the hard position, I get a VERY loose sync. In fact, if one oscillator is slightly de-tuned while I have a sync like this, the sync breaks. Unless I am missing the obvious, the only connection required is one cable from sync i/o of one oscillator to the other. I hope to learn more tomorrow when I hook up the scope to set the sine symmetry. 3 - There is significant value in checking everything again before actual power up. I try and take my time during construction so I will not make stupid mistakes. I assembled both my VCOs at the same time. However, after I was 100% complete, just before first power up, I took 15 minutes to scan each circuit board for the correct orientation of parts. Sure enough, I found that I had inverted U4. Since I found it prior to power up, nothing was damaged, and a quick desolder and re-install corrected the trouble. THANKS Paul for laying out the circuit board so all chips, transistors, and diodes have the same physical orientation. It makes it easy to spot such errors. BTW, two VCOs tuned a 5th apart, both fed into the MOTM-120 on "cross" mode is one awesome fat nasty waveform. Larry Hendry
Message
Finally oscillatin'
1999-05-25 by J. Larry Hendry
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