New Teensy 4.1 DIY Synthesizer

Nice project! :)

I would suggest to not call it shruthi. Even thought the original shruthi inspired you, this synth has nothing to do with it. Calling it shruthi 2 suggests this is related to mutable instruments or shruthi or is the successor of it.
 
Thanks for your tips. Shruthi uses symmetrical supply voltage. I want to do without that.

I want higher output level for bass sound. Teensy mixers and effects overdrive with bass sound.
 
I'm not sure yet if the bass boost and LP filter circuit works.

An internal bass boost in the Teensy (via a filter function) overdrives the internal effects and output mixer.
 
Hallo friend..

I have now built a new BassBoost circuit for my Synth. Works very well.
You now have the option, by assigning the free switching contacts on IC5a with other resistors R9/R17.
change the strength of the BassBoost. I would then also need a 2nd port line on Teensy




Bass-Boost-2-0.jpg





Bode Diagramm
Bass-Boost-2-0-aktiv.png


Bass-Boost-2-0-inaktiv.png



Greetings Rolf


 
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A bleeder resistor to ground on the outputs will ensure the output capacitors get charged up properly and avoid the loud crack/thump
on plugging them into some external amplifier. Something like 10k ought to do it.

You can't git rid of a thump if the system is connected up and then powered up, due to the asymmetric rails, however.
 
Hallo Freunde ..

Versuchte es erneut mit 79L05 und 78L05 als Spannungsquelle für den TL072. Aber auch nicht so schön (siehe Bild).


Sie können das Ein- und Ausschalten meines Audiomixers deutlich hören. Mmmm


Grüße Rolf


Plop-Sym-1-0.png


Yellow: +5V Blue: -5V Pink: OpAmp Out
 
What exactly do you want to achieve with this??? Whats the difference between plugging in a jack and switching via a relais? And: whats the criteria for switching on the Relais?
 
When the operating voltage is switched on, the capacitor C18 / C19 is charged via the resistor R20 / R21.

This prevents a switch-on pop at the output. After 500ms the relay is switched to the audio output.

Teensy monitors the voltage from the power supply. If it sinks, the Teensy could switch off the relay before there is a switch-off plop on connected amplifiers.
 
You still create a Click with these types of Relais, i guess you would need a "make before break" type of relay. Besides this, a relay for preventing a switch on pop is deep in overengineering terrain. But thats just me.
 
Its easy: every time you connect something (quick enough.... see here "Why do some synths produce clicks") and there is a voltage difference it clicks. It doesnt matter if you connect it via plugging in or a relay - its the voltage difference that counts. So if you use an non-symmetrical psu it will click in any way, as your voltage for "silence" is not 0V, your output will swing around Vcc/2. Only with symmetric power chances are that "silence" on your output is 0V that should be equal to GND. And GND should be at the same level in your synth AND your mixer. If not, it will click anyways. Thats the reason for real symmetric inputs on professional consoles (the ones with the matched transformers on the inputs, not these "servo symmetric" op amp lookalikes!).

To cut a long story short: this relay approach is most likely nonfunctional. But may be a USP, though.
 
Hello loving Teensy friends.

I changed the output amplifier and power supply a bit.The amplifier had too much interference from the 9V supply at the output.
For this reason I now use a 12V power supply and sieve the 9V supply for the amplifier.
The low pass filter at the input of the amplifier limits the maximum output frequency to 23 KHz.

Bass-Boost-5.jpg



BassBoost aktiv
Bass-Boost-aktiv-20-KHz.png


Greetings. Rolf
 
Noise floor is measured as power spectral density, that plot is showing the power spectrum w.r.t. the loudest tone, so the
-78dB isn't meaningful as a measure of noise, since changing the FFT number of points will shift it up and down as the bins change size.

I've a Python tool for analyzing sound files, and displays the spectrum with scales for both power spectrum and power spectral density,
with 0dB representing a full-scale sinewave (just before the samples would clip, basically).
Jeannie_spectrum.png
I measure the PSD at low frequencies as about -115dB/Hz and the mains hum as a spectral peak at -90dB. The tone itself is -6dB, so the
mains hum is -84dB down. Audacity's plot spectrum uses +6dB for a full-scale sine wave, so my dB are basically 6dB less than Audacity's.

If the noise floor were -115dB/Hz across the audio band (20kHz) that would be a total noise power of -72dB (or -66dB compared to the tone).

Your plot with only a 1024 point FFT has large bins of 43Hz width and is completely unable to resolve the mains peak, and the skirts of
the Hann window's spectral leakage are obscuring a lot.

Try 4096 point FFT and a window like Blackman-Harris that has more contained spectral leakage and you'll see that -78dB is purely an
artifact of your FFT and window.
 
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