Hi all,
Has anyone used a microcontroller to send a clock signal to the FV-1? Is this doable with something like an ATMega328?
Thanks,
Sean Costello
Using a microcontroller to clock the FV-1?
Moderator: frank
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As long as the clock signal is 0 to 3.3V it should work fine. Run it into the X1 pin to clock the FV-1. If it will be a variable clock make sure that any change in frequency is smooth and not abrupt.
Frank Thomson
Experimental Noize
Experimental Noize
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Re: Using a microcontroller to clock the FV-1?
A collaborator and I have been exploring this for using the FV-1 as an oscillator / physical model. It appears to work quite well.seancostello wrote:Hi all,
Has anyone used a microcontroller to send a clock signal to the FV-1? Is this doable with something like an ATMega328?
Thanks,
Sean Costello
Also, big fan ;D your Z-DSP card is my #1 favorite in terms of quality. If you feel like checking it out I have a ZDSP card (or several) in progress.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BNf9BNIAS4j/
also assumably have a Z-DSP, you can run an arduino with the tone function or some form of interrupt and wire a jack up to use as the clock input to the ZDSP
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Re: Using a microcontroller to clock the FV-1?
Not sure why it took me 6 months to see this, but it sounds INCREDIBLE! That is some amazing time stretching/scrubbing going on there. Very Gantz Graf.MacroMachines wrote:If you feel like checking it out I have a ZDSP card (or several) in progress.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BNf9BNIAS4j/
I have 2 Z-DSPs, but no Arduino. I need to pick one up and try this out.also assumably have a Z-DSP, you can run an arduino with the tone function or some form of interrupt and wire a jack up to use as the clock input to the ZDSP