Hi, sure, you can never get a perfect sine out of an analog circuit, but the AS VCO has a knob which shapes the wave from a sinusoid in the middle to a triangular waveform at the edges. If you don't get the knob *exactly* in the middle, the wave sounds very angular already. A dedicated sine output might have been a better idea to keep more of the buzz out. This said, voltage controlled waveshaping is definitely a feature which I like most of the time. But I tend to want a fairly clear tone some times, and this particular feature set makes it difficult to get. Even a center-detent in the pot would have made it easier. best, D. Argitoth wrote: > Derek Holzer, I don't know anything about curcuit boards, but isn't > the distorted sine problem a design flaw, not a feature flaw? What I > mean is, even if that waveshaping knob wasn't included, you probably > wouldn't be able to get a less buzzy sine. It just takes a good set of > ears to make sure you got the waveshape knob set right. Other > oscillators are designed differently and have imperfect sines that are > not buzzy, but have some additional harmonics, which is much better > than buzzy IMO. I think this is the case with Plan B VCO and Tip Top > Audio VCO. -- derek holzer ::: http://www.umatic.nl ::: http://blog.myspace.com/macumbista ---Oblique Strategy # 170: "Use something nearby as a model"
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Re: [Doepfer_a100] Re: starting a modular
2008-11-23 by Derek Holzer
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