> 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.
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Re: [motm] new module request - drift generator
2002-01-22 by Paul Schreiber
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