Fixed Filter Bank Oops
1999-10-06 by Tkacs, Ken
Oops-that "1Hz" should of course be "1kHz."
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-----Original Message----- From: Tkacs, Ken [mailto:Ken.Tkacs@...] Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 1999 8:19 AM To: 'motm@onelist.com' Subject: RE: RE: [motm] Anybody like Fixed filter banks?(new mod) From: "Tkacs, Ken" <Ken.Tkacs@...> Okay, here's the story (I've got the schematic right in front of me): The Moog 907 Fixed Filter Bank had ten controls. The first knob was a shelving filter marked "Low Pass" and the last "High Pass." In between, the resonant frequencies of the bandpass filters were labeled: 250Hz, 350Hz, 500Hz, 700Hz, 1Hz, 2 KHz, 2.8KHz, 14KHz. Some of those seem strange, but that's what the schematic says. The input stage has a one-transistor amplifier, and the output stage was a two-transistor deal. The filter stages were all poteniometer/2-inductors/3-capacitors/3-resistor deals. Two of these ten-band (sic) filter banks were the core of Wendy Carlos' ten-band vocoder as first used ion her Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, and soon after in Timesteps, as heard in "A Clockwork Orange." She had Moog give her jack-access to the filters so that she could run the first bank of separated signals into envelope followers, and the ten from the second FFB into VCAs. When the former controlled the latter, she had a simple vocoder. Later, Moog produced the Model 914 FFB. The design was very similar to the former, but with 14 bands of resolution. Only "Lo Pass" and "Hi Pass" are marked on the schematic. I'm too tired to do the math to figure out the center frequencies of the bands. Hope this helps.