as said in the BBD manual... when doing clock filtering (LPF at the BBD output) use the CV
OUT of the BBD to modulate the LPF... Its true that you LOSE a bit of high freq. (but then
its the point of the operation basically) but it does give GOOD RESULTS...
and I agree with Adam that starting from very basic is a good way to understand and work
out such module... it took me a bit of time just studying it very closely with just basic
signal in, cv's, filters before and after... one or two inputs, etc...
same remark with A106 is valid too... as many of the controls really work together and
gives very different result depending even on the order the parameters are changed over
time...
if that helps...
Best,
A
--- In
Doepfer_a100@yahoogroups.com
, "Adam-V" <adam-v@...> wrote:
>
> Seems a bit strange to me.
>
> I would start from scratch and just patch a VCO into the BBD input and
> monitor the BBD output whilst manually tweaking the delay time to
> check the basic functionality of the module. Then I would try an LFO
> to modulate the delay time to determine that the CV2 input is
> functioning correctly. If that works then I would re-try the envelope
> generator just to be sure I had actually connected it properly. Then I
> would try a different envelope generator or perhaps recheck the
> envelope generator settings.
>
> One other thought, the feedback isn't set to a point that the BBD is
> self-oscillating is it
>
> Perhaps one of the other members can offer up further ideas.
>
> Cheers,
> Adam-V
> --- In
Doepfer_a100@yahoogroups.com
, "regimental1200"
> <regimental1200@> wrote:
> >
> > Sorry, I'm at work now and was just not refering to the correct
> > jack. I basically take the output of an envelope and I stick it
> > into CV2 of the BBD module. I also dial-in a bit of feedback.
> > Beyond that, only the MIX OUT is connected.
> >
> >
>