Hello to all,
I would like to take the liberty of this short message to present a project in which Teensy 4.1 plays an important role.
I really want to thank Paul for the incredible work that is being done. I'm already a fan of the Teensy 3.2, two of which equip my "star" instrument (The River, a big analog polyphonic...).
I'm now starting a new project in which the Teensy 4.1 takes a big place. It manages both the logic of the board and the multiplexing of all the voltages needed to drive the analog modules, but also offers a digital generator, designed as a support, a complement to the analog part. The 4.1 is completed by a DAC 8552 , a DAC PCM5102a and ADC CS5343.
What fire power! The 4.1 manages 2 digital sources and destinations, with "nodes" encapsulated in classes that allow me to multiply the instances and types of syntheses.
In this example, I don't use analog VCOs, all the sources come from the Teensy via the PCM5102a at 88K.
Samples of sound
The whole thing then passes through several filters and analog envelopes, VCAs as well as digital envelopes and digital LFOs, always generated by the Teensy. The latter does not exceed 20% of usage despite all this... Inexhaustible the bugger !!!
A little before the end, you'll hear a bug I haven't managed to fix yet, 2 or 3 seconds of constant flow, I'd find
At the very end, I add a bit of analog VCO, the cohabitation of the two seems very satisfying to me.
Just one word then, thanks Paul and the whole community who brought me a lot of information ! I have developed a module that could be of interest to the community and that I will make available to you a little later: a wavetable generator that you hear several times in the demo, compatible with files from WaveEdit (256 * 64 samples). I also adapted the Mixers to allow 8 or 16 inputs, which seems simpler than mutiplying the Mixers.
Best regards
I would like to take the liberty of this short message to present a project in which Teensy 4.1 plays an important role.
I really want to thank Paul for the incredible work that is being done. I'm already a fan of the Teensy 3.2, two of which equip my "star" instrument (The River, a big analog polyphonic...).
I'm now starting a new project in which the Teensy 4.1 takes a big place. It manages both the logic of the board and the multiplexing of all the voltages needed to drive the analog modules, but also offers a digital generator, designed as a support, a complement to the analog part. The 4.1 is completed by a DAC 8552 , a DAC PCM5102a and ADC CS5343.
What fire power! The 4.1 manages 2 digital sources and destinations, with "nodes" encapsulated in classes that allow me to multiply the instances and types of syntheses.
In this example, I don't use analog VCOs, all the sources come from the Teensy via the PCM5102a at 88K.
Samples of sound
The whole thing then passes through several filters and analog envelopes, VCAs as well as digital envelopes and digital LFOs, always generated by the Teensy. The latter does not exceed 20% of usage despite all this... Inexhaustible the bugger !!!
A little before the end, you'll hear a bug I haven't managed to fix yet, 2 or 3 seconds of constant flow, I'd find
At the very end, I add a bit of analog VCO, the cohabitation of the two seems very satisfying to me.
Just one word then, thanks Paul and the whole community who brought me a lot of information ! I have developed a module that could be of interest to the community and that I will make available to you a little later: a wavetable generator that you hear several times in the demo, compatible with files from WaveEdit (256 * 64 samples). I also adapted the Mixers to allow 8 or 16 inputs, which seems simpler than mutiplying the Mixers.
Best regards