Leslie, Hello again. I am going to post a new Excel worksheet that is sort-of envelope generating tool that sort-of mimics wavetable scanning. What you do it put in four different waves (start to finish if you will if you were doing a wave scan) select a few general options on the speed attack/decay/release, hit a button and the program generates envelopes to sort-of fit the waves. That is, it generates four different envelopes and then assign each harmonic to the "best fitting" envelope. My question: I can generate the details of the envelope, including assigning each harmonic to the appropriate envelope,but I do not know how to take that information, turn it into sysex, and ship it out via midi to the K5. Can you help with generating/sending the associated sysex? I was thinking what would work great is if you could you expand your WaveAnalyzer so that I could copy/paste from Excel the envelope information and the Harmonic series in to the WaveAnalyzer, and then just send out the sysex from WaveAnalyzer. (I would like to just send the sysex out from Excel, but I just don't know how to do that. I am not a programmer...) Thoughts? --- In k5synth@...m, "Leslie Sanford" <jabberdabber@h...> wrote: > >Leslie, in a previous e-mail you provided the following equation for > >converting linear spectra to K5. Thank you. You wrote: > >Log2(149.5744446 * partial) * 10 / step > > > >I assume that Log2 means "Log base 2","partial" is a linear value > >ranging from 0 to 1, and that "step" is dB/K5 step = 72.24719896/99. > > Yup, that's it. > > I got some nice confirmation that this equation works correctly today. I > recorded the K5 playing a single partial at various amplitudes. Then I > looked at the waveforms in a wave editor program and compared the linear > amplitude of the waveforms to the K5 amplitudes the partial was set to (hope > this makes sense). They matched up with what the equation said they should > be. > > >I played with this and I think I got it to work. > > Cool! > > >With that said, I came up with the K5 values for the Waldorf waves > >(from the 300Waves.pdf) number 10, 15, 84, 181, 385 and 415 they > >looked interesting. By looking at Waldorf wave 101 (pure sine wave) I > >conclude that the first line shown on the graph is actually the > >fundamental rather than the 1st harmonic. (Is that correct, is > >frequency of the 1st harmonic actually twice the fundamental or I am I > >confused on the nomenclature?) > > That's my understanding. You have the fundamental, 1st harmonic, 2nd > harmonic, etc. A lot of graphs seem to get this wrong. > > Hey, I was looking at one of the links you posted, and found that some > interesting graphs based on the Waldorf waves. Here's an example: > > http://www.xs4all.nl/~hkwad/waldorf/fft000.htm > > If you place the mouse over the red dots, a tooltip with appear with the > exact amplitude of the harmonic. Would this save you some work? > > I'll check out your Excel spreadsheet. > > _________________________________________________________________ > Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today - it's FREE! > hthttp://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/
Message
Re: Linear to K5 equation
2004-08-13 by nelsonj_sce
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.