if anyone is wondering how to use the "control" or "waveform" options, this should help: -Control 0 = linear windup, Control 1 = nonlinear windup, Control 2 = log winddown, Control 3 = log-log winddown -Waveform 0 = sine wave, Waveform 1 = sawtooth wave, Waveform 2 = square wave somehow, this plugin still works 9 years later!
Log winddown gives you a rather sharp curve, like what you would hear in a T-121 or a Thunderbolt. Log-log gives you a steadier curve that you would hear in a Hurricane or an SD-10.
That is implemented in the latest version. However due to the way Audacity works with plugins, silence has to be trimmed off the end of the winddown track (and the length has to be at least long enough for the second frequency to be reached).
Oh yeah, if you further develop this plugin, would it be possible for you to allow for a windup that is like a 3 phase siren? Not completely linear like the chirp generator, but linear with a smooth transition into the peak frequency like the windup in my Model 5 recording.
Heh, I have a massive collection of plugins like you do. This does look hella easier than manually coding these windups with Nyquist. What did you code this plugin in?
You download it, click on Computer in the Start Menu, click on Local Disk or OS Drive, click on Program files(x86), click on Audacity, drag the fsweep into the plug-ins folder. Ur welcome. I will make a tutorial on my other channel (2001scoop)
if anyone is wondering how to use the "control" or "waveform" options, this should help:
-Control 0 = linear windup, Control 1 = nonlinear windup, Control 2 = log winddown, Control 3 = log-log winddown
-Waveform 0 = sine wave, Waveform 1 = sawtooth wave, Waveform 2 = square wave
somehow, this plugin still works 9 years later!
Log winddown gives you a rather sharp curve, like what you would hear in a T-121 or a Thunderbolt. Log-log gives you a steadier curve that you would hear in a Hurricane or an SD-10.
That is implemented in the latest version. However due to the way Audacity works with plugins, silence has to be trimmed off the end of the winddown track (and the length has to be at least long enough for the second frequency to be reached).
x64 for this isn't made yet
I plan to do that as well as different waveforms, a timing constant, etc.
This is a neat little plugin and it will be cool to see it develop, but for now I'm going to stick with my manual method cause it's more flexible.
+2001scoop, W6LDS You are the reason i am here for your tutorial.
Oh yeah, if you further develop this plugin, would it be possible for you to allow for a windup that is like a 3 phase siren? Not completely linear like the chirp generator, but linear with a smooth transition into the peak frequency like the windup in my Model 5 recording.
Heh, I have a massive collection of plugins like you do. This does look hella easier than manually coding these windups with Nyquist. What did you code this plugin in?
Quick question, but for the steady and wind down, how did you do that? I can only get the wind up, and a little bit of the steady part.
Make it longer?
Where do you put these files after you've downloaded them?
You download it, click on Computer in the Start Menu, click on Local Disk or OS Drive, click on Program files(x86), click on Audacity, drag the fsweep into the plug-ins folder. Ur welcome. I will make a tutorial on my other channel (2001scoop)
Thunderbolt option? That's stupid and takes away the fun. All it takes is a few sine waves and a high-pass filter and you have a Thunderbolt sound.
Dude you need a new computer - never seen Audacity run so slow!!! ;-)