KOSMO GOT SOME NEW ADSR's
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- Опубликовано: 22 окт 2024
- KOSMO JUST GOT SOME NEW ADSR's
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I've spent all weekend catching up on your material and just blown away man. Pass on my respect to Kosmo too.
Can not get over how awesome this module is. Just got a small batch of pots today, so I will be doing the first test soon. Yeah, I am superslow builder theese days. I could not get the proper switch, and I will put some mini-jacks on the case, but I found the "right" knobs and spoiled it with some caps. I think it will look superawesome in it's own Kosmo case on top of my synth. Have to wait a bit longer for the rails so I can make the case, but atleast I have made an extra Modular in a Week power supply, so it should be ready to go once I figure out how the wires go and how to isolate it properly before I get all I need make case. Eurorack modules sound superinteresting, Kosmo to Eurorack and back might open the format for a few people, or maybe you can team up with Cristian from MIAW to make something superinteresting? I got this amazing idea for the museum, I can try to PM you or something. Stay awesome!
Never forget to read the secret messages on his hands.
The small decoupling capacitors are there to short any hf interference on the power lines to ground. They are not there as you seem to suggest around 3m02 to add some more capacitance to the electrolytic capacitors which are meant to stabilize the power supply voltage. They have different goals. The relatively big capacitors are there to smoothen any low frequency signal changes of the power supply, the small capacitors are there to short any high frequency signals on the power supply line to ground so that they do not interfere with the electronics.
yes I know however in an application like this its not necessarily important. but there was space so I put em on the board anyway. the high frequency while tom Wiltshires data sheet suggests to put them in I dont think they really make a difference as its an envelope generator. something like an oscillator maybe so. you and I agree on the meaning I just as usual explained myself badly haha.
That's pretty sick
Sam will you ever do some Eurorack version of all the modules you're designing?
yes I have some super different ideas coming up im gunna think about possibly doing them eurorack! however for these kind of things, there's already a number of adequate designs like it in eurorack.
@@THISMUSEUMISNOTOBSOLETE suuuuuuuuupppppppppeeeeeeeeeerrrrrr cooool
cant wait man
Thanks for these sam!
Can’t wait to build it!
Hey man!
Interesting and cool Video as always!
I just wanted to ask,
if there is any downside to this digital programmed ADSR Chip.
Can you hear a difference between a digital ADSR and an analogue one?
hey to me it isn't notieable. envelope generators like this were us3ed in the poly synths from the 80's. I dont have any complaints about it tbh
@@THISMUSEUMISNOTOBSOLETE
Alright!
Thanks for the quick awnser, I will build this ADSR with your schematics, and will build a eurorack size PCB aswell.
Looks and sounds pretty damn good!
Thanks as always for making such incredible good and inspiring Videos.
Keep the good work comin' :)
Where did you learn to put together the Synths?
cool.
Please share the protoboard layout, here or oj your patreon. It will be apreciated.
sorry about this Pablo! I handnt got a tested one to hand. since then it all got a bit hectic but ill make sure to get one as soon as I can! sam
LOOK MUM NO COMPUTER BUT MORE SERIOUS ISH Thanks Sam, it will be so nice! Thanks for your stuff, is amazing!😃
Would you mind making a strip board diagram for me/others that’s are interested. I would appreciate it a lot!!^^ I’ve been wanting to get in to synth\module making for some time now, but I’m on quiet the budget. I would really like to make a ADSR module as my first module for a number of reason but I find the diagram on your website kinda hard to follow as a beginner to electronics hardware and components. I know you have started to make the switch to Pcb for most of your projects or at least touring synths from what I understand. I just find the strip board diagram you did for stuff like the simple vco and simple lowpass filter.. sorry for the long rambling comment but im just really passionate about synths and music production or any project really that takes my mind off my mental illness lol but more seriously I hope you read and can help me out cause I’ve been working at this basically by myself banging sticks together hoping for some gorgeous synthesized sounds
is there a good way to make a super simple reverb/delay? to go with the super simple oscillators and filters etc.
spring speaker? how simple we talking?
@@THISMUSEUMISNOTOBSOLETE just in the same sort of style as the other super simple stuff, that any fool could easily make
@@amyshaw893 im working on a delay today so ill figure out a simple version.
The Rebote 2.5 project at Tonepad ( www.tonepad.com/getFile.asp?id=98 ) or the Cavedweller project at Madbean ( tagboardeffects.blogspot.com/2016/09/madbean-cave-dweller-2015.html ) are both relatively simple delays, using the almost-criminally-inexpensive PT2399 delay chip. It will give you just under 400msec delay. The MFOS Voltage-controlled echo ( musicfromouterspace.com/analogsynth_new/ECHOFXXX/ECHOFXXX.php ) provides more control, with the same delay time and chip.
You should port the PER|FORMER into a thru hole board with a nice big interface and get rid of the cursed BSP
I gotta be honest I just dont think your gunna beat the bsp on simplicity and speed sequencing, which I feel a lot of sequencers kind of overlook. im working on my own sequencer at the minute, however it is very very stripped of function but very useable. the issue I have is a lot of sequencers have way too many functions which ends up bloating the performance and sequencing process when ideally a sequencer shouldn't have multiple screens and every option on it under 2 clicks away (or a combination of only 2 buttons) no double taps or push finger down for extended times. no more than 2 or 3 pattern memory banks etc. simplicity is key, and im working on one, it'll take a bit of figuring out though, won't be much longer than a few months.
@@THISMUSEUMISNOTOBSOLETE yeah I get that I also really likes the workflow, butI just found the BSP unreliable with the micro USB problem and just kind of a one way street, if you wanna hear it you gotta program it. That's a very transparent workflow ethic and I dug it for a while but like; transpose, scale, ratchets, conditionals. Either are non existent or have to be changed manually. Also the jitter is a little too much, especially with midi but also with the gates and clocks.
I just finished the build on the performer yesterday (after like a month of debugging those 5 multiplexers lol).
It's SERIOUSLY powerful and SO tight. It's also very simple if you want, and it can be controlled by a launchpad.
You have curve channels which is sick (although max 5v uni, like even 7v would really be better). And you can route CV internally from other channels really easily to modulate a lot of useful things like transpose, octave, division, scale, length.
No long presses, almost no subfolders. It's either a page or a function. AND it's open source and the files are Kicad.
Just saying, I got blown away if you hadn't already it's got two new tutorials on YT I really recommend it.
Also a sequencer from you sounds amazing probably would be very direct and concise :) Long time fan, thanks for the reply!
I have always been confused by switch definitions....!
where are the pcb's made? jlcpcb? osh? something else?
prototypes at jlc cus they Are speeedy, I get most of em from a local one in Kent, but it really dont work out cheap for small prototype runs
@@THISMUSEUMISNOTOBSOLETE Aright so for prototypes you use jlc, and non prototypes locally? why do you do non prototypes locally ? (just curious :) )
@@duality4y really just trying out different things, plus the first couple of batches I got were a bit scratched here and there and I had someone else packing them who kept letting ones with a few scratches on out. But im constantly trying different things and ones, jlc have improved a lot over the past year, and im trying them sporadically for bigger runs. so who knows. plus a force of habit. as I pop over and pick em up when they are done. I keep on missing the couriers cus I have no front door in my place, its down a million corridors. the circuit boards I have zero complaints, its the panels as they aren't necessarily what they do, but it has improved quite a lot. early this year the local company was delayed too which made me think they probably outsource anyway so im trying a number of things out and seeing how it goes, i may very well just go all in jlc as the quality is pretty damn good on the most recent runs
How much to make me a guitar synth?
sorry I get a lot of emails on those kind of things. sadly because it aint a set out item planned to be made again its a mess and will take time I sadly do not have. best thing I would suggest to do is just build it yourself. I did that without much know how at all and managed to do it. so good luck!
Two possible paths. Do you mean a guitar *processor* , that shapes the envelope and timbre in response to guitar-generated events, OR do you mean a project that tracks the pitch of individual notes and derives CVs from the note pitch/es to drive VCOs? Both are useful, but the second one is far more complex, and costly. There are digital boxes that will let you feed in a regular guitar signal, and output MIDI, gate/CV, or both. Mono units are cheaper and more plentiful than poly. But once you have a decently-tracking gate and pitch CV, everything else becomes the same as a modular keyboard-based synth.
For guitar *processor* , probably the simplest solution is the late Ray Wilson's "Sub-Commander" project, over at Music From Outer Space. His widow and adult kids seem to be still selling PCBs for it at other sites, although I don't know if this is simply leftover stock or newly-produced boards.
Or were you asking how much the gentleman would charge to make one FOR you?
Aren't they just selling pre-programmed and labeled AVRs? That's so silly IMO.
his job and business it built up on providing these chips to companies. it doesn't really matter what the chip is. it still functions. a data sheet is provided. and its more than adequate. even for home brewers he has offered the files to burn your own.