Yahoo Groups archive

MOTM

Index last updated: 2026-04-28 23:35 UTC

Message

Re: [motm] new module request - drift generator

2002-01-22 by Paul Schreiber

>      I am new to this forum and fairly new to analog synthesis, so please
> forgive me if this question sounds stupid, but why would you want your
> synthesizer to drift? I thought the oscillators were carefully  designed so
> that they wouldn't drift.

Well, they *are*. My attitude is: it's a lot easier to ADD drift than to try to remove it/live
with it.

Some folks like the "random beating" that was a by-product of older VCO temperature drift. If so,
here are ways to emulate that, without sacrificing the glory of the MOTM-300/310 VCOs:

a) *ever so slightly* de-track the VCOs by adjusting the 1V/Oct trimmer. Say you have 3 VCOs.
First, set all 3 for 'perfect' tracking, having zero beat frequencies as best you can. Then, on
VCO #1, turn the tracking pot about a 1/8th turn CW, and on VCO #2 turn 1/8th turn CCW. Leave VCO
#3 alone.

b) use "bad" control voltages. Modern MIDI-to-CV converters have 16-bit DACs that are very
accurate. Instead, use the....errrrr....."lowly" PAiA MIDI-to-CV for that great 7-bit accuracy.
So, even though the VCOs are 'perfect', the CV feeding them is not. Use the CV/Gate of an SH-101
(gack!). The older, the better.

c) Use the MOTM-320 LFO with RATE = 0, AND with -5V fed into the 1V/Oct input. Feed TRI into a
MOTM-850 input on '1' setting, then to a FM input on '1' setting (i.e. heavily attenuated). This
simulates the air temperature slowly rising and falling.

At NAMM, we left the modulars on 9hr/day (6 days in a row). The drift was about 0.2Hz per day. To
me, that's GOOD.

Paul S.

Attachments

Move to quarantaine

This moves the raw source file on disk only. The archive index is not changed automatically, so you still need to run a manual refresh afterward.