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On 30 Nov 2014, at 18:36, 'istari' istari@... 1 < Doepfer_a100@yahoogroups.com > wrote:
Hi
Useally its good practice to use passive mults not as a mixer, there is a danger that the current flows back from one module out to the othe module out if they are not protected.
but some people just use passive mults as mixer, i am not
cheersfelix
Hi,
A question about passive mults. I want to put the signals from two oscillators (prob Rubicons) at very high frequencies together to have the beat frequency in the audio range. Difference tones or I've sometimes heard it called Heterodyning. I have read about doing it with a mixer - but if I used a mult (in reverse - ie two inputs and taking one output) it would be non linear and give more rich harmonics - or so I understand. ( Page 175 Electronic Music: Systems, Techniques and Controls, Allen Strange). But my question is do passive mults work in this way Is it safe - ie not going to damage the oscillators in some way
This comes from reading about Pauline Oliveros's early electronic music and listening to a lot of her music. There are sound textures that I really liked but didn't know how they were made until recently reading about her using supra sonic tones to create beat frequencies in the audio range.
Hope someone can answer about the mults as non linear mixers,
David
www.movingisliving.co.uk
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