Afaik the DTG is the guts of a DSG with a smaller panel layout.
So the DTG can come in different flavours according to your
specifications.
- One flavour is with "cycle switches"
- One is with "bipolar outs"
- One is with "signal in"
I've got a custom panel that was born with "bipolar outs"
- later i decided that that i needed "signal in" instead
and Rex helped me with the info required for the modification.
It involved desoldering a few wires from the PCB
and resoldering them to new points on the PCB.
best, - Kim
Citat amnesia <amni56@...>:
So the DTG can come in different flavours according to your
specifications.
- One flavour is with "cycle switches"
- One is with "bipolar outs"
- One is with "signal in"
I've got a custom panel that was born with "bipolar outs"
- later i decided that that i needed "signal in" instead
and Rex helped me with the info required for the modification.
It involved desoldering a few wires from the PCB
and resoldering them to new points on the PCB.
best, - Kim
Citat amnesia <amni56@...>:
> "Sig in" Dual Transient Generator? where is that? you mean the VC in?
>
> Chris Sawyer wrote:
> >
> > Joe,
> >
> > If you patch your gate to the "sig in" jack (instead of the usual
> > "trig in" jack) you should get a nice attack-sustain-release envelope
> > where the rise and fall pots control the attack and release times,
> > respectively. Of course, for this to work properly, your gate signal
> > must actually stay high, which should be the case with most CV
> > keyboards and midi/CV convertors.
> >
> > Chris
> >
> >
> >
>
>