I was playing with the MOTM-110 tonight, and I noticed a fair amount of feed-through from the Y audio input. The following patch worked very well. Modules: 2 VCOs, Ring Modulator (RM), Audio Mixer, Low or High Pass Filter, VCA, 2 envelopes (EGs), one MOTM-940 or other mult panel, and one CV inverter. Patch VCO1 to RM's X input, VCO2 to a "mult", mult goes to Y and inverter, inverted signal goes to audio mixer, RM out goes to audio mixer, mixer out goes to VCF. One EG (ADSR) goes to VCA, other EG (AD) goes to VCF and VCO1 freq mod (using a mult.),. I'm ignoring pitch and gate patching info since a ring modulator could sound good with none, one or both VCOs patched up to a keyboard or CV converter. The most important detail is that the inverted signal is mixed at about 25% with the ring modulator signal. This inverted signal "masks" the bleed-through of the Y audio input. You can think of the Y feedthrough as +3 and the inverted signal as -3, and add them together for "zero." In reality, the feedthrough is reduced to a very small amount that is not noticeable. Personally,I only heard a "flanging" of the ring modulator output, and couldn't detect the original "Y" VCO at all! I suppose if I had 2 inverters, 2 audio mixers and alot of patience, I could reduce feedthrough of the X input, but it wasn't as noticeable since it was changing (because of the envelope). I realize that the MOTM line-up doesn't have all of these modules, but I'm sure it will eventually. Actually, in about 3 months I could probably patch a similar sound up with only one non-MOTM module: the CV inverter. And maybe the simple mixer will have an inverting output, so I could use a mixer as an inverter. If there are any math majors out there, don't criticize my explanation unless you can think of a "simpler" way to explain this (without explaining harmonics, FFT, etc.) Roy Tate roytate@... http://www.ionet.net/~roytate
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Reducing CV feedthrough on the MOTM-110
1999-03-30 by Roy Tate
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