I'm thinking of adding a couple slots for creating your own scales where you can tune the notes individually. They still have to be within one octave. Also the 1V/Oct CV input still needs to be withing the 12 notes per octave.
Cool stuff. So, I guess this isn't so easy to do as an analog circuit?? :) Also, just to get ahead of any confused comments you might get, in English, we typically pronounce "PWM" as "pee double-you em" rather than "pee vee em". I immediately knew what you meant (it helps that I spent some time living in Germany, I guess), but I'm guessing you'll get some confused comments, so, thought I'd point it out. :)
Thanks for the comment, David. I have a background in digital board design, so for me digital stuff is easier than analog circuits. But enjoy both and like to mix them. The prononciation is a sloppy direct translation from swedish - "pe dubbel-ve em". But I'm to lasy to say "dubbel" so I leave that out 🙄 The difference between v and w is not so important in Swedish and in some cases people tend to switch between them - especially if you want a word to "look old", the V is often replaced with W.
@@MeeBilt makes sense to me. It's a bit different in German, but similar enough that, yeah, I'm right there with you. I wish English would rename W to something monosyllabic. ;)
Nice. Will be watch this development ❤
Thank you very much!
Will this thing have a way of customising scales from the panel too?
I'm thinking of adding a couple slots for creating your own scales where you can tune the notes individually. They still have to be within one octave. Also the 1V/Oct CV input still needs to be withing the 12 notes per octave.
Cool stuff. So, I guess this isn't so easy to do as an analog circuit?? :)
Also, just to get ahead of any confused comments you might get, in English, we typically pronounce "PWM" as "pee double-you em" rather than "pee vee em". I immediately knew what you meant (it helps that I spent some time living in Germany, I guess), but I'm guessing you'll get some confused comments, so, thought I'd point it out. :)
Thanks for the comment, David.
I have a background in digital board design, so for me digital stuff is easier than analog circuits. But enjoy both and like to mix them.
The prononciation is a sloppy direct translation from swedish - "pe dubbel-ve em". But I'm to lasy to say "dubbel" so I leave that out 🙄 The difference between v and w is not so important in Swedish and in some cases people tend to switch between them - especially if you want a word to "look old", the V is often replaced with W.
@@MeeBilt makes sense to me. It's a bit different in German, but similar enough that, yeah, I'm right there with you. I wish English would rename W to something monosyllabic. ;)