
see this post for a video
"A huge riff on the original Buchla 292 Quad Lo Pass Gate, including a Mix Out and containing no fewer than 8 vactrols! The QMMG offers the additional features of High Pass Gate mode, Voltage Controlled Feedback, Direct Coupling (for processing of Control Voltages) and Normalizations so that multiple channels may easily be used together to create Bandpass Gates, steeper HP or LP Gates or even something like a traditional Synthesizer Voice Architecture.
The voltage controlled feedback is routed differently in each mode.
In VCA mode it is routed to provide slightly non-linear GAIN. Daisy chain multiple channels for voltage controlled clipping. In BOTH Mode the feedback is routed to provide DAMPING of the ringing vactrols. The effect of adding feedback in BOTH mode is not unlike placing your hand upon the head of a drum, while striking, thus allowing the user to control how much the Vactrols ring. In the LP and HP modes, the feedback is routed to provide a highly unstable, non-linear resonance, which at higher settings, will clip asymmetrically. The filter is slippery and smooth at low resonance settings, but it cuts like a choir of daggers at high resonance settings.
The benefit of Direct Coupling is that a channel of the QMMG could be used to attenuate or amplify an incoming CV before applying to another channel. The mixing section is set-up so that inserting a plug at the output socket of any given channel removes that channel from the mix, therefore you could use one half of the QMMG for voltage controlled mixing of CVs to apply to the other half being utilized for signal processing.
This module is 24HP and consumes 60mA worth of current. The price is TBD.
Available soon from Analogue Haven."
Let's rename electronic components so they sound cooler, like Vactrol's. Perhaps:
ReplyDeleteTransistor - Klee Junction
Resistor - Argos Device
Capacitor - Bithurial Sweller
Inductor - Stargate
link
ReplyDelete...and Matrix takes the Snark Win.
ReplyDeleteWhile I like mirror symmetry as much as the next guy, I think that having the rotary switches for mode be mirrored is a mistake.
ReplyDeleteI would want to have the positions be assigned to muscle memory, and the mirroring would detract from that.
hmm, i just noticed something about the symmetric design...
ReplyDeletehttp://tinyurl.com/jnquy