INTRODUCTION
One output
for many inputs?
There are many occasions when you will want to direct a single CV or signal
to multiple destinations, and for these applications you will need some
form of signal 'splitter'. For example, you may wish to take a single
signal, split it into two paths, and present the first to one VCA,
while the second is further treated before being passed to a second VCA.
This arrangement permits many complex audio effects such as panning and
phasing, and one way to achieve it is to use an RS170 Multiple. One
input from many outputs?
On other
occasions, you may wish to mix signals before presenting them to a
single input. If you wish to control the proportions in which this is
done, you should use an RS160 or RS165 Mixer. If you simply wish to sum
the signals, you can use the RS170 as a pair of passive 4-channel
mixers with unity gain.
IN USE
The RS170 offers two banks of five interconnected sockets. Each bank is
hard-wired together in parallel and passive, so the module draws no
power from the RS10 or RS15 power supply. A signal or control voltage
may be applied to, or taken from, any socket. There are no distinctions
between inputs and outputs.
Each bank can
be used to distribute a single output to as many as four inputs. If you
patch the banks together, a single output can be directed to seven
inputs.
Conversely,
each bank can be used to combine up to four outputs from
multiple source modules, before presenting the result to a single input
on another module. If you patch the banks together, up to seven outputs
can be combined and presented to a single input.
On rare
occasions, there may be a voltage drop if a single output is distributed too
widely. This is most likely if a number of RS170 Multiples are chained
together within extremely complex patches. If this occurs, you should
replace one or more of the RS170s in the patch with RS230 CV Buffers.
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