Hove you successfully done this or just hypothesizing
1 - VCFs don't track nearly as accurately as VCOs so I can hear timbre changes when pitch
changes
2 - The VCF introduces a phase shift so the VCO waves are no longer sync'd in a
determined way.
3 - The level of the "sine" changes as pitch changes
"Harmonically rich" sine wave - that's a funny oxymoron :-)
--- In
Doepfer_a100@yahoogroups.com
, Argitoth <argitoth@...> wrote:
>
> Yeah, exactly! I figured Tip Top Audioo VCO sine was NOT buzzy, but
> just harmonically rich, there's a huge difference. Buzzy sounds like
> "ZZZZZ," harmonically rich sounds like, "VVVVV." Buzzy, BAD,
> harmonically rich, ACCEPTABLE.
>
> Holy crap, did you just notice that the letter V looks like a triangle
> wave and the letter Z looks like a saw wave .... sweeet!
>
> And you CAN reduce buzzyness if you dedicate a filter to waveshaping
> to reducing the harmonics and if you send it some of the 1v/oct to its
> cutoff voltage control so that the filter opens up more as you play
> higher notes and closes more if you are playing lower notes.
>