You’re a lifesaver! Oddly enough this didn’t work for me quite like you explained but I did find that holding down the specific track button will mute it until you release pressure. Much better than having to use both hands to press function at the same time (or somehow reaching two fingers across the entire device!). Now I can actually perform with a mic in my hand
Magnifique! Very cool! Looked like a Forbidden Planet background score! Weird! I enjoyed very much! Would you please explain us in other video how this machine works? Thank you!
Thanks I did found that on my own but few month later I couldn't remember how to do it. Too bad that it seems not work the pattern has already been save one time. Elektron should have include the latch mode :(
The teensy 3.2 has a DAC built in, but I am using the teensy 4.0, which does not. You can make analog voltage with a simple RC lowpass filter and a PWM pulse wave, but I have not personally done that.
Pretty cool! Could make for a cool feature in a sequencer. Maybe instead of a knob it could be simply a button that when held creates natural vibrato. Could be toggled with CV.
Did you use a voltage divider to get the supply voltage down from the 12 volt to a 5 volt for the op-amp supply voltage? Also, is one of your terminals for the op-amp wired to ground. & if so, why?
I used a low power op amp, the MCP6002, which I am powering with the microcontroller's 3.3v and GND. It is really helpful because it is a rail to rail op amp, meaning that it can output to it's power rails, but not outside of that, which keeps any oddly high voltage signals (like 15ish) from damaging the microcontroller as the ADC input clips when it would get about 3.3v. Check out the schematics for Mutable Instruments's Rings (among others) for the circuit.
@@carsonwalls1118 if available, I am looking to get into microcontrollers and would like to see if you would be available to talk? Thank you in advance
That is normal behavior for cranked-up EQs. You are basically boosting the volume of a particular frequency past the normal levels a gain stage is built for. Turn down the knob and you'll get a clean sound again.