ParasitStudio Guitar Syth - can the Oct up be separated from the Oct down?

Started by Granny Gremlin, November 18, 2015, 04:15:01 PM

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Granny Gremlin

I like the demos of this thing. Just wondering what part of the circuit (e.g. u2.1 or u3+u2.2) is the Oct up vs the Oct down generator. 

http://www.parasitstudio.se/uploads/2/4/4/9/2449159/0415_guitar_synth_doc.pdf (schem on pg4)
my (mostly) audio/DIY blog: http://grannygremlinaudio.tumblr.com/

Nthorn

vco_out on the cd4046 should be the octave up. 4046 multiplies the signal by feeding the vco_out into a divider then into comp_in. 4046 is an awesome chip and you can get some cool sounds with them.

Luke51411

I've built this and it's awesome! I don't think you can separate the octaves. When you activate either octave it effects the other.

Granny Gremlin

Yeah, that's what I was worried about.  Seemed too good to be true that it would just be the 4015 doing it (U2.1).  ... but I suppose even easier than my original plan to build just the Oct Up parts on vero/perf, would be to use the PCB but just not populate SW1  and jumper the blend pot pads to be 100% Oct up.  Wondering what else I could get rid of if I don't need the vol control either... could I just jumper the input of R9 (not populate it) directly to output and eliminate the whole blend section altogether?
my (mostly) audio/DIY blog: http://grannygremlinaudio.tumblr.com/

maartendh

The mix pot deactivates the channel you don't want to hear by connecting it to ground. Connecting R9 to C6 should work. Tie pin 9 of U1.4 to + (pin 14 of U1) when you are not using the octave down part - you can let pin 8 be unconnected.

For even higher octaves up, connect SW2 to Q2 (pin 11) or to Q3 (pin 2).

R.G.

Search for my mods to the Roctave divider. It used the 4046 PLL to generate several octaves up and a couple down, all at the same time, as well as other things.

A single 4046 can only lock to one note from a guitar at a time. It is keyed to the zero crossings (i.e. signal edges) in the input.  The trick to getting good results from a PLL is in the input filtering to wipe off excessive zero crossings in the input signal and in how you add and filter the resulting logic signals.
R.G.

In response to the questions in the forum - PCB Layout for Musical Effects is available from The Book Patch. Search "PCB Layout" and it ought to appear.

Granny Gremlin

Quote from: maartendh on November 20, 2015, 08:10:09 AM
Connecting R9 to C6 should work. Tie pin 9 of U1.4 to + (pin 14 of U1) when you are not using the octave down part - you can let pin 8 be unconnected.

Hey, thanks a lot; never would have occurred to me about pin 9.

I'll check out that Article RG, thanks.

my (mostly) audio/DIY blog: http://grannygremlinaudio.tumblr.com/

Granny Gremlin

my (mostly) audio/DIY blog: http://grannygremlinaudio.tumblr.com/