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wax+wire
Joined: Sep 28, 2014 Posts: 17 Location: Australia
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Posted: Thu Jul 23, 2015 11:42 pm Post subject:
LDR with really low minimum resistance for a VACTROL vibrato |
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so i'm building a vactrol for a vibrato in a bent Casio SK 5 with a LTC 1799 alternative crystal clock. I have a little 555 circuit that is creating a breathing LED to be my pitch vibrato.
Thing is I want my LDR to oscillte between 0 Ohms and say 1K Ohms. Is this possible? is anything like this possible?
What sort of LDRs are out there |
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AlanP
Joined: Mar 11, 2014 Posts: 746 Location: New Zealand
Audio files: 41
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Posted: Fri Jul 24, 2015 12:14 pm Post subject:
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| Have you tried a resistor in parallel with the vactrol's resistance side? |
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wax+wire
Joined: Sep 28, 2014 Posts: 17 Location: Australia
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Posted: Sat Jul 25, 2015 6:31 am Post subject:
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yeah i have. from my understanding, putting say a 500 Ohm resistor in parallel with a LDR that has a range of 5K-500K will result in the resistance varying around 500 Ohms, but never getting close to zero.
It'll change the range, but not lower it. |
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PHOBoS

Joined: Jan 14, 2010 Posts: 5873 Location: Moon Base
Audio files: 709
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Posted: Sat Jul 25, 2015 2:06 pm Post subject:
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no, you're not going to get it lower, they usually have a range somewhere between 500 ohms and >10M.
Well you probably could put a bunch of them in parallel all controlled by either the same LED or maybe
a couple LED's, But that still wouldn't get you a very low resistance. Maybe using a FET instead could work.
Or drop the LTC1799 altogether and use a 74HCT4046 instead, which has a build in VCO so you can contol
it directly with a voltage. You could still use the vactrol setup or connect it (with some adjusting) instead of the LED. _________________ "My perf, it's full of holes!"
http://phobos.000space.com/
SoundCloud BandCamp MixCloud Stickney Synthyards Captain Collider Twitch YouTube |
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wax+wire
Joined: Sep 28, 2014 Posts: 17 Location: Australia
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PHOBoS

Joined: Jan 14, 2010 Posts: 5873 Location: Moon Base
Audio files: 709
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Posted: Tue Jul 28, 2015 12:59 pm Post subject:
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hmm let's see, you don't need the whole comparator phase locked loop stuff, just the VCO section which is very simple.
just a small capacitor (between pins 6,7) and a resistor from pin 11 to GND which sets the range, you could also use a pot here.
I think in your case the best solution would be to use a small mixer circuit on the CV input (pin 9). With a potentiometer
to set the pitch and an input for your tremolo (with a pot. used as an attenuator). This will let you control the pitch
and tremolo depth independently. You could take a look at this circuit: http://electro-music.com/forum/post-372062.html#372062
I think the 74HC4046 would actually more useful than the 74HCT4046, but a standard CD4046 will be too slow for your needs.
Another thing I was thinking about is that you could use the LTC1799 but with a smaller capacitor, this would give you
the same speed at a larger resistance so then the Vactrol might work. I don't know how you're using it though. _________________ "My perf, it's full of holes!"
http://phobos.000space.com/
SoundCloud BandCamp MixCloud Stickney Synthyards Captain Collider Twitch YouTube |
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Bogus Noise
Joined: Jun 03, 2009 Posts: 65 Location: Sheffield
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Posted: Sun Aug 02, 2015 9:09 am Post subject:
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The H11F1 is also a really decent alternative to a vactrol. It doesn't have any of the slew that vactrols have so you can pitch your modulation osc up really high and get some wicked clangy noises.
I'd also be tempted to use a TL071/TL072 for the LFO, as 555 waveforms lose their shape when they're pitched up too high. _________________ Circuit Bent Sonic Absurdity:
www.bogus-noise.co.uk
http://www.youtube.com/user/BogusNoise |
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wax+wire
Joined: Sep 28, 2014 Posts: 17 Location: Australia
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Posted: Sun Sep 06, 2015 11:28 pm Post subject:
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sorry to revive this, but some more discoveries!
the LTC 1799 datasheet describes it as having a VCO setting - https://cds.linear.com/docs/en/datasheet/1799fc.pdf with a oscillating voltage between 0-1.13V
now that is a tiny voltage range, but i was thinking a circuit designed to create a pulsing LED with a few resistors might do the trick?
thoughts? |
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