The main differences I've found between ring modulators is weather they are AC coupled or not and how much bleed-through you get from the program and modulator inputs. The Synthi ring was AC coupled, meaning when used as a VCA (a DC voltage for the modulator) the Signal would appear only when the DC was "moving". So a gat inputted there would make a sound on the rising and falling edges and not when held. These are the most common ring modulators. The first one I ever used was the one on a ARP 2500 and if I remember correctly (it was +30 years ago!) it was combined with a VCA. The circuit is quite simple and that's why you often see dual versions. As to the bleed-through - I guess you have to have first hand experience with the unit. Technically when putting in two sine waves A & B into the unit all you should here on the output is two tones a+b and a-b. If you hear the originals, that is the bleed-through. Usually this is at a very low level and not too much a problem but if you are using it as a pitch doubler (both a and b the same pitch) then it can get in the way. I would imagine that RMs in the same price range are very much alike. It cost to make a good one. To emulate the RM in the Synthi almost any will do - it was not the best RM out there for sure - mine had lots of bleed-through though some of that could be blamed on the matrix I'm sure. The Plan-B Model 25 looks very nice. It is a combo unit with a VCA and etc - much like the ARP 2500's unit. and the ring is DC coupled. I have not hear this unit but the spec say 65cB of carrier suppression which is very good. -James On Feb 10, 2008, at 5:09 AM, johnppp2 wrote: > I'm still searching on my basic building blocks, anyone point me > towards the fave Ring Mod? I'm still on my EMS style way of thinking > but if there's more versatile ones out there i'd like to know about > them. > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > >
Message
Re: [Doepfer_a100] Best Ring Mod?
2008-02-10 by James Husted
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.