I was thinking of the application where a VC Divider has it's VC input come from the row of a sequencer and the /N output goes to the clock input of the sequencer. The row sets the duration of each step in the sequence. Using a Y-cord or multiple won't help in this instance as the rate is constantly changing. The benefits of clocking a sequencer this way as opposed to using a VC clock or LFO are: 1. Sequencers can be synced to each other using multiple VC dividers and a common clock, and note durations for each can be varied. 2. Sequencers can be synced to MIDI. 3. Sequencers can by synced to tape. If /1 is not available from the /N output then this can still be accomplished assuming the /N output has a suitable range, say from /2 to /32. That would give a range from 16th notes to whole notes with clocks at 32nd note rates going to the clock input of the VC divider. John Loffink microtonal@... ----- Original Message ----- From: "Paul Schreiber" <synth1@...> To: <motm@egroups.com> Sent: Saturday, August 19, 2000 9:12 PM Subject: Re: [motm] Food for thought > Divide by 1 = Y-cord or multiple :) > > It does divide by 2 to 9, then a seperate /16. All simultameously available. > It can also > "half divide" by 1.5, 2.5, 3.5, etc. > > Paul S. > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Microtonal" <microtonal@...> > To: <motm@egroups.com> > Sent: Saturday, August 19, 2000 3:57 PM > Subject: Re: [motm] Food for thought > > > > Does the VC Rate Divider do a divide by 1 from the /N output? This is > very > > useful if you're feeding it a pulse rate that's sixteenth notes. Then you > > just divide by 1 to get a sixteenth note, by 2 to get an eighth, etc. > It's > > possible to set the input rate to twice your needed note rate, but it's > just > > not quite as intuitive. > > > > John Loffink > > microtonal@... > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >
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Re: [motm] Food for thought
2000-08-20 by Microtonal
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