this post was submitted on 21 Apr 2024
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synthdiy

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Building, modifying and repairing synthesizers.

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Have built a Thomas Henry LM-VCO and in the middle of building an Eddy Bergman / YuSynth ADSR and a VCA. Hooked up to an AI Synthesis Stereo Matrix Mixer and Hexinverter Mutant Brain with an Alesis QX-49 keyboard and SR-18 drum machine.

What should I do with the last 10hp of my case?

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 7 months ago (3 children)

Hmm, sounds like it might be worth me adding on another 24hp section to my case so that I can add a LFO. I’ll start with the filter, though - was looking at another Eddy Bergman stripboard layout for a VCF that ought to be quite manageable.

[–] SuperSynthia 2 points 7 months ago (2 children)

With 24 hp, you could fit a couple of LFOs and have space left for an attenuator. Look up attenuators, I’m sure Bergman’s site has one. It helps a lot for taming your modulations and you can fit like atleast two in four hp. A good LFO module size would be atleast 8 hp with two separate LFOs behind the panel. Some people can cram more in less space but ergonomics suffer. I think it’s plausible with to use a CD40106 (inverting Schmitt trigger oscillator) and a TL074 (output buffer ensuring 0-5v strength) with all the supporting circuits/jacks but definitely don’t take my word for it

[–] [email protected] 1 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

That sounds like a plan.

I have some leftover TL074, a few CA3080, a few LM13700, and plenty of TL072 and basic CMOS chips and opamps, but I dont think I have the CD40106, but isnt a Schmitt trigger something that can be built entirely from transistors?

I’m thinking of making a 12hp generative module using arduino, DACs, and some code to operate as many CV controls as I can manage. Would be really cool to have it be able to implement a physical model algorithm for a guitar pluck or something, too.

[–] SuperSynthia 2 points 7 months ago

Oh for sure you can use transistors. Slightly Nasty makes a full fledged VCO from transistors. So a great micro controller would be either the teensy line or even a RP2040 (I think that’s the designation it’s a raspberry pi based microcontroller.). Look up the Europi they have some great code examples you could look at.