INTRODUCTION
Sometimes it
would be nice to spend more time playing your sequences than adjusting
every knob minutely to keep them in tune. On other occasions, you might
want the output from your Sample & Hold to be in semitones (i.e.
'real' notes) rather than totally random pitches. Then there are the
occasions when it would be nice to be able to generate glissandos
instead of smooth portamento (or 'glide') effects. Fortunately, there
is a single device that makes all of these possible. It's a Voltage
Quantiser.
A Voltage
Quantiser is simply a device that rounds every voltage passing
through it up or down to an exact semitone. It does this by making sure
that all the output voltages conform to the logarithmic relationship
that defines the well-tempered scale for a 1V/oct synthesiser.
So, if the
set-up of the knobs on your sequencer is not quite
perfect, the quantiser will
correct them for you. Similarly, any voltages output by the S&H will be
rounded to a semitone, so that every note is random but lies on one of
the 12 semitones of the conventional scale. Finally, as far as these
three examples go, a smoothly varying voltage such as a slow triangle
wave from an LFO or a 'slewed' voltage smoothed by one of the
Integrators SLEW modules will be cut up and output in
semitone steps.
The RS260
incorporates software that ensures glitch-free transitions between quantised
notes. It also offers two operational modes. Free Run shifts the CV
every time it changes enough to move from one semitone to another,
whereas Gate requires a pulse to tell the device when to determine the
next note. Gate is particularly useful because it means that you can
clock the output for advanced rhythmic and polyrhythmic effects.
IN USE CV
Inputs: V-IN 1 and V-IN 2
Any two voltages in the range 0v to +5v presented to the V-IN 1 and V-IN 2
inputs are summed linearly by an internal mixer. The summed voltage
will also lie within the range 0v to +5v, giving a maximum quantised
range of 5 octaves.
TRANS
(Transpose) IN
A voltage applied at TRANS IN will be added to the summed voltages from V-IN
1 and V-IN 2. This will transpose the output up or down allowing you,
for example, to transpose all the notes in a sequence passing through
the Quantiser.
OFFSET
You can apply a fixed transposition (offset) of up to 2 octaves to the
output. This is applied at the output so it is not quantised, and is
normally used for fine-tuning purposes.
Mode Select
Switch
There are two operational modes, selected using the FREE RUN/GATE
switch.
FREE
RUN
In Free Run, the RS260 outputs a new CV every time the mixed input CV
changes enough to move from one semitone to another.
GATE
In Gated mode, the RS260 requires a pulse to tell the device when to
determine the next note.
GATE IN
If the Quantiser is in GATE mode, you must apply a Gate pulse in the range
+1v to +20v to this input to cause it to determine the output voltage.
The output is determined on the positive-going edge of the pulse, and
will be held until the next positive-going pulse is received. The GATE IN
LED will light when a suitable pulse is detected at the GATE IN.
TRIG
OUT
A +10v trigger pulse is output every time the output voltage shifts. In FREE
RUN mode the timing of this trigger will be determined by the voltages
received at V-IN 1 and V-IN 2. In GATED mode, the output trigger will
echo the pulses received at the GATE IN. The TRIG OUT LED will light each
time a trigger is output.
You can use
this trigger to perform tasks such as clocking a sequencer, or triggering an
envelope generator so that each new note is articulated independently
of previous notes.
OUT
There is a single output that carries the quantised CV.
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