Preferably with a slew limiter in the circuit. Seperate up and down control preferred.
I tried CV Janitor for the slew limiting part, wich works great, but i need something that works like a some sort of "sample and hold".
If its RE's then fine.. If multiple, also fine
Any ideas ?
Thanks !
Which device can hold a cv signal indefenitely, untill input changes ?
Ochen K's A-Series 2 Modular Synth has Sample & Hold. No slew limiter, though. For that I think you could use Hamu's ModSlewer, which has separate rise/fall settings.
buddard wrote:Ochen K's A-Series 2 Modular Synth has Sample & Hold. No slew limiter, though. For that I think you could use Hamu's ModSlewer, which has separate rise/fall settings.
Indeed it does. Which is great because i have it Thanks !
I'll probably get CV Janitor for the slewing. Should get me sorted.
V9 | i7 5930 | Motu 828 MK3 | Win 10
buddard wrote:Ochen K's A-Series 2 Modular Synth has Sample & Hold. No slew limiter, though. For that I think you could use Hamu's ModSlewer, which has separate rise/fall settings.
I just remembered that Pulveriser has a built-in slew limiter that you can use, with separate rise/fall settings!eauhm wrote:
Indeed it does. Which is great because i have it Thanks !
I'll probably get CV Janitor for the slewing. Should get me sorted.
- Connect your signal to the Follow input
- Set the Follow trim pot to 50%
- Set rise/fall time using the Attack and Release knobs on Pulveriser
- Take the resulting signal from the Follow output
Oh indeed.. Cool. Even though i allready went ahead and bought CV Janitor
Which is fine, because i can set the release way longer on the Janitor, which is what i was looking for
Thanks again ^^
[for future reference.. the decay on Janitor goes to a maximum of around 4 minutes and 39 seconds, whereas Pulveriser is done in around 15 seconds and a bit... ]
Which is fine, because i can set the release way longer on the Janitor, which is what i was looking for
Thanks again ^^
[for future reference.. the decay on Janitor goes to a maximum of around 4 minutes and 39 seconds, whereas Pulveriser is done in around 15 seconds and a bit... ]
V9 | i7 5930 | Motu 828 MK3 | Win 10
The only problem with Pulveriser's slew limiter is that it changes the CV values to around half of their original value. But it's not quite exact, so if you use something like Note CVs it's almost impossible to get the original values from what I remember.buddard wrote: I just remembered that Pulveriser has a built-in slew limiter that you can use, with separate rise/fall settings!
- Connect your signal to the Follow input
- Set the Follow trim pot to 50%
- Set rise/fall time using the Attack and Release knobs on Pulveriser
- Take the resulting signal from the Follow output
But if accuracy is not important and you want to save some money, Pulveriser is an option!
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