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Re: VCO's wiggling

Re: VCO's wiggling

1999-05-14 by Dave Bradley

You really don't need a freq counter or strobe tuner or oscilloscope or DVM
to set tracking on these babies!

It's really easy to do by ear! These are the easiest VCOs to set tracking on
that I've ever seen. All you need is a second VCO, either MOTM or from any
other source, as long as it can just sit there and not drift.

1. Set up your reference oscillator to play a sawtooth at about 125 Hz (one
octave below middle C, exact pitch does not matter at all). It should not be
connected to any keyboard voltage or modulation, you just want a straight
steady tone. I find it easier to set the tone to play continuously, either
by turning up the initial VCA gain or, if it is an external VCO from some
other synth, prop the key down with something.

2. Hook your MOTM-300 to your midi/cv source, and use a sawtooth. You should
have already set the trimmer to approximately its center range as the VCO
instructions told you to. Make both oscillators the same loudness. Don't
play so loud that you cause other things in the room to rattle, etc. Play
one octave below middle C on the keyboard, and tune the MOTM exactly to the
same pitch as the other VCO using Coarse and Fine controls. When the pitch
is very close, you hear "beats" between the 2 pitches. When it is in tune,
you hear none.

3. When they are perfectly in tune, play a note one or two octaves higher
and you should hear that the VCO is either somewhat sharp or flat. Turn the
Fine tune up or down until it is in tune again. If you had to turn Fine
clockwise, it was flat, and you will need to turn the trimmer clockwise a
little bit. If you had to turn Fine CCW, it was sharp, and you have to turn
the trimmer CCW some.

4. Now play the low note again, and retune the MOTM so that it is perfectly
in tune (no beats), and repeat steps 3 and 4 to refine your tuning until you
zero it in.

5. You can continue to refine this by playing a wider interval. I generally
stop after about 4 octaves.

Repeat for all VCOs, setting up 1 as the drone and one for calibration.
Easy! It should not take you more than 5 to 10 minutes per VCO.

Dave Bradley
Principal Software Engineer
Engineering Animation, Inc.
daveb@...

> about the 1V/OCT now i'm shure i need a frequency counter to do it the
> professionl way.
> can any body recomend on a low cost hi quality counter ?
>
> thanx
> Gur Milstein

Re: VCO's wiggling

1999-05-14 by Gur Milstein

Hi list.
i just fenish building my ferst vco and i must say it was a hard work but
i love this work,it takes me 8 hours to build one.
so i powered it up and evry thing is working great.
now i think is it a good sound vco is it a bad vco how do i know,
well in the begining i was not happy since the sound coming out of it
was too clean compering to my asm-1 vco's but then i realized
that this clean wave's are the right thing i want,but why ?
well when you use a asm vco in a basic vco>vcf>vca patch the asm saw
sound beter but this is because the asm vco waves are "dirty" they
have lots of noise component on the basic wave,BUT if you start
making modulation with the asm vco's you would get too much noise,
when you ring modulate 2 asm vco's or maiking FM then you realize
you need clean waves.

allso when you make modulation you need precice tracking and stabilty vcos.
so when i started modulating the MOTM vco i realized its power and beautiful
sound's.
so when you power your vco dont judge it buy its basic sound judge
it in modulation,i like this vcos a LOT.

about the 1V/OCT now i'm shure i need a frequency counter to do it the
professionl way.
can any body recomend on a low cost hi quality counter ?

thanx
Gur Milstein

Re: VCO's wiggling

1999-05-14 by Gur Milstein

thanx Dave thats help,i will try agin.

Gur Milstein

At 09:55 AM 5/14/99 -0500, you wrote:
>From: "Dave Bradley" <daveb@...>

>1. Set up your reference oscillator to play a sawtooth at about 125 Hz (one
>octave below middle C, exact pitch does not matter at all). It should not be
>connected to any keyboard voltage or modulation, you just want a straight
>steady tone. I find it easier to set the tone to play continuously, either
>by turning up the initial VCA gain or, if it is an external VCO from some
>other synth, prop the key down with something.
>
>2. Hook your MOTM-300 to your midi/cv source, and use a sawtooth. You should
>have already set the trimmer to approximately its center range as the VCO
>instructions told you to. Make both oscillators the same loudness. Don't
>play so loud that you cause other things in the room to rattle, etc. Play
>one octave below middle C on the keyboard, and tune the MOTM exactly to the
>same pitch as the other VCO using Coarse and Fine controls. When the pitch
>is very close, you hear "beats" between the 2 pitches. When it is in tune,
>you hear none.
>
>3. When they are perfectly in tune, play a note one or two octaves higher
>and you should hear that the VCO is either somewhat sharp or flat. Turn the
>Fine tune up or down until it is in tune again. If you had to turn Fine
>clockwise, it was flat, and you will need to turn the trimmer clockwise a
>little bit. If you had to turn Fine CCW, it was sharp, and you have to turn
>the trimmer CCW some.
>
>4. Now play the low note again, and retune the MOTM so that it is perfectly
>in tune (no beats), and repeat steps 3 and 4 to refine your tuning until you
>zero it in.
>
>5. You can continue to refine this by playing a wider interval. I generally
>stop after about 4 octaves.
>
>Repeat for all VCOs, setting up 1 as the drone and one for calibration.
>Easy! It should not take you more than 5 to 10 minutes per VCO.
>
>Dave Bradley
>Principal Software Engineer
>Engineering Animation, Inc.
>daveb@...
>