Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

General Gear Discussion - effects, synths, etc.

Moderator: Ghost Hip

User avatar
bigchiefbc
IAMILFFAMOUS
IAMILFFAMOUS
Posts: 7313
Joined: Fri Dec 28, 2007 9:45 am
Location: Cumberland, RI

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by bigchiefbc »

Pop wrote:Soooooooooooooooooooo...

What would you all say is considered the "best" bit crusher pedal on the market right now? Or at least just your favorite!

The HEXE III and Scrutator caught my eye because they both have Expression.

Thanks!
The best crusher I ever played was the Frostwave Sonic Alienator, but it's rare as shit and they go for mad money. My second fav was the Hexe.
Buy my gear! viewtopic.php?f=44&t=58763
Achtane wrote:I can hit it with a Blowing Up and it'll just sound awesome instead of like capacitors farting into each others' dicks.
Achtane wrote:
last.fm wrote:Zs makes music that is variously categorized as no-wave, post-jazz, brutal-chamber, brutal-prog, and post minimalist.
srsly?

Fuck you.
User avatar
Uncle Grandfather
IAMILFFAMOUS
IAMILFFAMOUS
Posts: 8550
Joined: Mon Oct 14, 2013 7:34 pm

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by Uncle Grandfather »

Pop wrote:Soooooooooooooooooooo...

What would you all say is considered the "best" bit crusher pedal on the market right now? Or at least just your favorite!

The HEXE III and Scrutator caught my eye because they both have Expression.

Thanks!
Hexe sounds realllllly good but OTO Bicuit is my favorite, I like it more than my sonic alienator.
User avatar
vallaton
committed
committed
Posts: 269
Joined: Thu Nov 01, 2012 5:43 am
Location: Helsinki

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by vallaton »

http://www.effectsdatabase.com/model/ho ... sychopress

been waiting for more info on this thing since effects database had a picture of it in their instagram a few days ago. i hope it's gonna be dirt cheap and fun as hell.
User avatar
solewheelin
experienced
experienced
Posts: 543
Joined: Wed Dec 08, 2010 12:53 pm
Location: NY, NY

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by solewheelin »

Holy crap that looks awesome. Ho-tone comin out with the goods.

I wonder if it'll be like anything else out there.
Great deals (here) with - Skip (x2), Brochacho, TheInk'd, rfurtkamp, phantasmagorovich, foomanfat, Helter, hbombgraphics (x3), buyyerown, deucejanisch, jrmy, HotRats, Chuckjaywalk, uberdave, alexsga, ianmarks (Turnipfarm FX), RainbowsAreFree, tsirotinsky, JustinM1789m, zrobertez, jrh60, Casavettes, John, tashiattack, symbolique, aen, chrisdermo, fldrvr, controlFreak
User avatar
lordgalvar
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 6165
Joined: Fri Nov 14, 2014 5:59 pm
Location: Somewhere between ignore and the OC

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by lordgalvar »

That looks like a Hot One!
-Ring Mods!
"I make you chocolate"
  • -comesect69-via-Majin Buu-by-way-of-Dirge/mtl.asm and special consideration from CA Anderton
User avatar
Invisible Man
Zen of BILF
Zen of BILF
Posts: 4606
Joined: Thu Dec 11, 2014 3:26 pm

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by Invisible Man »

In b4 codetocontra.
The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents.

https://soundcloud.com/invisible-man-music
https://bradromans.bandcamp.com/album/figures
User avatar
neonblack
IAMILFFAMOUS
IAMILFFAMOUS
Posts: 8090
Joined: Fri Feb 28, 2014 12:00 am
Location: Wilmington, NC

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by neonblack »

Contrabump!
User avatar
fuzzisokiguess
committed
committed
Posts: 281
Joined: Sun Feb 19, 2017 10:56 am
Location: Being

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by fuzzisokiguess »

How will we know
If this rush of noise we're hearing
Is the world's biggest hammer
Coming down on our heads crushing our lives
And everything that we've said
Crushing the existence of any small effects we've had
Or is it just some super-sonic flux invented in the future
Blowing up so hard you can hear it before it happens
How will we know?

I know it's an easy out, but: Bitquest's crusher.
DRodriguez wrote:Imma build a disc delay based on a stationary bike, the faster you pedal, the faster the delay.

Bike backwards and you get a reverse delay.
User avatar
crochambeau
IAMILF
IAMILF
Posts: 2218
Joined: Mon Jul 20, 2015 12:49 pm
Location: Cascadia
Contact:

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by crochambeau »

Thanks. Now I'm sitting over here a few beers into a heat wave and I'm grappling with the delineation between analog and digital. Warning, this might be total bollocks, because I don't have AC.

I don't know if I agree with the statement that bit crushing (I'm correct in stating this is simply bit depth reduction, yes?) must be digital. But my stance makes the following assumptions:

Bit depth is measured "where the rubber meets the road" (at the signal) and is essentially a measurement of the full amount of steps a signal rides on. That is to say:

1 bit is 1 step ( or more precisely two states: on or off)
2 bits have four states, a lower low, upper low, lower high, and upper high.
3 bit have eight states (....)
4 has 16
5 does 32
6 into 64
7 : 128
8 : 256

etc.

So, if an analog signal is fed into a bank of comparators, and the reference for each comparator is feeding of a rung of a resistor ladder, that means that at any given point in time you have a quantity of comparators that arr latched ON that is a more or less direct representation of the amplitude of signal at input.

Does the fact that any of these comparators have only two states, either ON or OFF (not counting the transition swing) make this a digital signal?

Say we haven't quite completely lost our mind, and are limiting ourselves to a five bit equivalent circuit, those 32 comparators would be essentially running in parallel at input (with the laddered reference voltage), and the output voltage could be fed directly into an R-2R resistor ladder in real time, limited only by the speed at which a comparator can go from a cut-off to a saturated state or back again. This would in effect be an A/D D/A by which the bit depth "crushing" could be implemented by simply shunting rungs of either the input or output ladder to cast the signal into a courser stair step relief. Easy switch ass action right there.

Such a circuit would be unhindered by the sampling time constant, as it would run in real time (limited only by physics, or the transition time of the circuit), and certainly be free of implemented logic, which is kind of where I personally draw the line between the two domains (analog versus digital).

So I guess the question boils down to: is such an implementation analog, or digital (by merit of the comparator essentially only producing an on or an off state)? What if the comparators are slow enough that at certain frequencies they more or less follow a rudimentary curve of the original signal? Does that become sloppy digital, or just fucked analog?

Don't overlook the fact that when you boil it down, any digital computer is essentially running analog signals within the billions of PN junctions at hand, it's just the way in which the signal is treated that makes it a digital versus an analog signal.

They both rule.
User avatar
raj007
experienced
experienced
Posts: 879
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2016 2:56 pm
Location: USA

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by raj007 »

I've played two Bitcrushers...

Make Sounds Loudly ...."Analog".....Was garbage
Hexe Bitcrusher ..."Digital"....Awesome

Now, Piotr is a genius, so it's not really a fair fight...but that MSL was ass. Sure doesn't want to make me want to try another analog Bitcrusher .
popvulture wrote:Nothing is truer bypass than the void.
D.o.S wrote:Whenever I step on my tuner the shitty guitar playing stops.
User avatar
crochambeau
IAMILF
IAMILF
Posts: 2218
Joined: Mon Jul 20, 2015 12:49 pm
Location: Cascadia
Contact:

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by crochambeau »

raj007 wrote:but that MSL was ass. Sure doesn't want to make me want to try another analog Bitcrusher .
In his defense, Mark is a builder - not a designer, and I believe a lot of his work is customer specified so faults of the sound of that particular device should not tarnish the MSL brand.

I do agree that stuff touted as analog bit crushing is largely just the electronic equivalent of shaking a rock in a box.

Man, glancing over my yesterday posting makes me tempted to hide from the internet this afternoon. Gonna get ugly...

..and make no mistake, a build derived from that insanity would be a colossal undertaking the cost of which no end user in their right mind would shoulder.
User avatar
ck3
FAMOUS
FAMOUS
Posts: 1086
Joined: Wed Feb 24, 2016 10:59 pm
Location: Southcentral, CT, USA

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by ck3 »

I have experience with the Alesis Bitrman, Alesis Ineko, Electroconducive Analog Sample Rate Reducer, an early Copilot Effects analog sample rate reducer, original Red Panda Linesux Tonecore bit crusher module, Mooer LoFi, Hotone Krush, Malekko Scrutator, and Zoom bitcrushing algorithms from the past 5 years. Insufficient gating and unwanted oscillation were recurrent issues with many of the aforementioned options. The fatness of analog sample rate reduction was appealing for a brief period, but I ultimately grew to appreciate the sterility and crunchiness of digital signal mangling. The Scrutator is my preferred bitcrushing and sample rate reduction solution at the present time, though the amount of trial and error tweaking to balance levels without clipping seemed excessive.
User avatar
raj007
experienced
experienced
Posts: 879
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2016 2:56 pm
Location: USA

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by raj007 »

crochambeau wrote:
raj007 wrote:but that MSL was ass. Sure doesn't want to make me want to try another analog Bitcrusher .
In his defense, Mark is a builder - not a designer, and I believe a lot of his work is customer specified so faults of the sound of that particular device should not tarnish the MSL brand.

I do agree that stuff touted as analog bit crushing is largely just the electronic equivalent of shaking a rock in a box.

Man, glancing over my yesterday posting makes me tempted to hide from the internet this afternoon. Gonna get ugly...

..and make no mistake, a build derived from that insanity would be a colossal undertaking the cost of which no end user in their right mind would shoulder.
Ya I should've clarified ...I've had MSL make me a Muff and it was dope as hell.

Good builders aren't immune to swingin and missin though haha.
popvulture wrote:Nothing is truer bypass than the void.
D.o.S wrote:Whenever I step on my tuner the shitty guitar playing stops.
User avatar
codetocontra
IAMILF
IAMILF
Posts: 2070
Joined: Sat Oct 29, 2011 12:52 am
Location: parts unknown

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by codetocontra »

Invisible Man wrote:In b4 codetocontra.
neonblack wrote:Contrabump!
:hello:
In the market for a different bitcrusher since the Ottobit Jr has opened my ears to some great sounds while also not loving it. Planning to bump the larger bitcrusher thread later.
D Rock
committed
committed
Posts: 209
Joined: Wed Sep 02, 2015 12:25 am

Re: Bit crushers and a quick Frantabit review

Post by D Rock »

I would say ottobit jr is the current king. I finished up a parasit studio sonic reducer tonight, the thing just sounds so damn good, can't wait to test it out at band volumes. Parasit as a builder is extremely overlooked, he makes some badass shit that is right up the ILF ally.
Post Reply