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This Multicassa excels at making erratic, stumbling rhythms.

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Leploop Multicassa in a Pod 40x: Small Eurorack drum box!

Still refining and fiddling. This is not its final form. mp3 and Furry cartoons http://www.patreon.com/tegerio High quality wav http://drphlogiston.bandcamp.com Tip jar https://ko-fi.com/tegerio

Comments

tegerio

uhh .. "Ancient Chinese Secret"?

Simone Spinozzi

"Cassa" litterally means "wooden box" but it can also be used for a resonance box, yes 😝 hmm... also, since you mention you make use of attenuators,... been trying to find a zener cable, but at most i find attenuator cables, since they are all measured in decibel it's probably just a resistance that cuts the signal to 1/X. So yeah, i'm guessing you consider "trimmers" as a straight up voltage cut, while "attenuators" are your average resistances. And the rest was very interesting as usual. Thanks for making this. 😉👍

tegerio (edited)

Comment edits

2021-11-03 22:09:01 On audio mixing consoles "trim" is a pre-amp volume control that cuts or boosts the signal before it goes into the EQ. In American electronics lingo, a "trimmer" is a tiny potentiometer installed on the circuit board, used for calibration & small adjustments .. as opposed to an "attenuator" which is a volume pot mounted on the panel where you can reach it & use it to reduce the voltage of a signal. They both do the same thing. I think the only difference is where they are located .. and sometimes a "trim" is used to set the range or sensitivity of the main pot.
2020-01-20 02:10:01 On audio mixing consoles "trim" is a pre-amp volume control that cuts or boosts the signal before it goes into the EQ. In American electronics lingo, a "trimmer" is a tiny potentiometer installed on the circuit board, used for calibration & small adjustments .. as opposed to an "attenuator" which is a volume pot mounted on the panel where you can reach it & use it to reduce the voltage of a signal. They both do the same thing. I think the only difference is where they are located .. and sometimes a "trim" is used to set the range or sensitivity of the main pot.

On audio mixing consoles "trim" is a pre-amp volume control that cuts or boosts the signal before it goes into the EQ. In American electronics lingo, a "trimmer" is a tiny potentiometer installed on the circuit board, used for calibration & small adjustments .. as opposed to an "attenuator" which is a volume pot mounted on the panel where you can reach it & use it to reduce the voltage of a signal. They both do the same thing. I think the only difference is where they are located .. and sometimes a "trim" is used to set the range or sensitivity of the main pot.