VCO Triangle/Sine glitches
1999-03-27 by Paul Schreiber
After 4-5 hours of basic research, I have *minimized* the glitch on the top portion of the triangle wave (which of course shows up on the sine as well). This glitch is an artifact of the full-wave rectifier action due to: a) finite switching times of the diodes b) diode capacitance c) finite switching time of the comparator that discharges the main integration cap DC offsets in the sawtooth are trimmed out by using a 'scope. Now, the glitch itself is 1-2uS wide. That's right, *microseconds*. You can see it on a 'scope. You can't hear it, or hear another problem when the VCO is used as a LFO. The width of the glitch is constant up to about 12Khz. Also, if you pass the triangle through a LPF, it goes away. So, I just thought I'd toss this out beforehand. If it makes you feel better, the glitch is about 1/2 the one on a Moog modular. And, our triangle symmetry is 10X better above 4Khz than Moog's. Paul Schreiber "Basic research is what I'm doing when I don't know what I'm doing." W.Von Braumm