CGS37 - CV Cluster | Cat Girl Synth

CGS37 - CV Cluster | Cat Girl Synth

Special Price $6.40 Regular Price $8.00

The CV cluster is an unusual kind of DIY synthesizer mixer. It takes two input voltages - a base control voltage, and a modulating control voltage, and creates the sum and differences of them.

This is a PCB only suitable for multiple formats

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The CV cluster is an unusual kind of mixer. It takes two input voltages - a base control voltage, and a modulating control voltage, and creates the sum and differences of them. These different voltages are the base voltage offset in a positive direction by the modulating voltage and the base voltage offset in a negative direction by the modulating voltage. A series of equal taps between these two points results in outputs that always maintain the base control voltage at its full amplitude, mixed with a differing amount of the modulating voltage. The center output has equal amounts of positive and negative modulation canceling each other out, and thus behaves as a straight-through connection for the base input.

Some ideas on how to use this module:

Feed your 1/v octave input into the base input, and an envelope generator, LFO, sequencer etc. into the modulation input. Connect the outputs, starting with the center unmodulated output, and working both up and down, to a series of VCOs. While the modulation input remains at zero, all of the VCOs will track. As the modulation voltage increases, the VCOs connected to modulated outputs will shift in frequency away from the base, at an amount proportional to its position from the center output. For example, a small modulation voltage will de-tune the oscillators slightly, fattening the sound. A modulation CV of 5 volts will set each output 1 volt apart, setting the oscillators an octave apart.

An envelope generator connected to the modulation input creates in interesting effect.

It of course can be used with audio frequency signals too, and may prove interesting when driving a cluster of wave multipliers or similar. Two audio signals fed to it could produce interesting stereo effects.

Note: The sum and differences produced by this module are voltage differences, NOT frequency differences. It is NOT a ring modulator.

A little on how it works:

 

 
The schematic of the CV Cluster.

 

All four op-amps in the input structure are wired as unity gain voltage inverters or summers.

The base input voltage is inverted by IC1a, and fed to the inverting summers built around IC1C and IC1B. The result, assuming no other input, will be the inversion of the inverted signal, thus restoring the signal to its original condition, but at two separate places. Between these two places there is a string of resistors forming a voltage divider. As both ends of this voltage divider are held at the same voltage, each tap will also be at that voltage.

The modulation CV is mixed directly with the inverted base signal in IC1B, and is thus inverted at the output of IC1B, and the bottom of the voltage divider, the result being the difference of the two voltages, specifically, the base CV minus the modulation CV. The modulation CV is also inverted by IC1D before being mixed with the inverted base signal in IC1C, the result being the sum of the base signal and the modulation signal.

These mixed points are fed to the top and bottom most output jacks. At the various taps of the voltage divider between these two points, there will be correspondingly less of the modulation signal present as the two differing voltages cancel each other out. At the center point they will cancel each other out perfectly. (Because of this, the base CV has been routed directly to the center output, rather than wasting another voltage follower to produce the same voltage.)

Each tap on the voltage divider is buffered by a self-compensating load-independent voltage follower.

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Brand Cat Girl Synth (CGS)
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