LFOs - How do?
Posted: Tue Apr 11, 2017 12:49 pm
So I've been tinkering with building and all that good stuff, but my mind keeps coming back to this question about LFOs. Please forgive me and feel free to correct me if I've got a grave misunderstanding here, as I'm totally self-taught, and only know as much as the sum of my disjointed google searches have told me.
My question is mainly about how to make an LFO that's not just a square wave oscillator. I'm aware of the basic square wave LFO stuff from 555s or 40106s and the likes, but I'm curious if there's a way to make a nice non-square wave oscillator using analog equipment. I have read some about filtering the square waves down to triangle or sine, but I know nothing about what that means in practice.
I also discovered a programmable IC where you can upload someone else's script that'll turn it into an LFO with save shape selection, depth, and intensity controls, but I was hoping to get something analog working.
Any advice for this kind of thing? Is it worth going analog or should I get over my technophobia?
Eventually I'd like to get to the point where I can understand creating an offset (I'm assuming you'd just need to send some reference voltage above ground to the gnd pin on your LFO source IC?) & varying parameters like rate, depth, and maybe a shape control (a la the Twin stags/Happiness, which can go from ramp to triangle to saw).
My question is mainly about how to make an LFO that's not just a square wave oscillator. I'm aware of the basic square wave LFO stuff from 555s or 40106s and the likes, but I'm curious if there's a way to make a nice non-square wave oscillator using analog equipment. I have read some about filtering the square waves down to triangle or sine, but I know nothing about what that means in practice.
I also discovered a programmable IC where you can upload someone else's script that'll turn it into an LFO with save shape selection, depth, and intensity controls, but I was hoping to get something analog working.
Any advice for this kind of thing? Is it worth going analog or should I get over my technophobia?
Eventually I'd like to get to the point where I can understand creating an offset (I'm assuming you'd just need to send some reference voltage above ground to the gnd pin on your LFO source IC?) & varying parameters like rate, depth, and maybe a shape control (a la the Twin stags/Happiness, which can go from ramp to triangle to saw).