+1 what JR. said.
The predecessor to the iPad was the hPad. Both trace their origins to garages.
http://www.amazon.com/Hewlett-Packard-F ... 654&sr=8-1
Search found 5471 matches
- Fri Aug 20, 2010 11:45 am
- Forum: Pro Audio Design
- Topic: Mid Side M-S Matrix Uses No Precision Resistors
- Replies: 271
- Views: 636845
- Fri Aug 20, 2010 7:09 am
- Forum: Pro Audio Design
- Topic: Mid Side M-S Matrix Uses No Precision Resistors
- Replies: 271
- Views: 636845
Re: Mid Side M-S Matrix Uses No Precision Resistors
I did the calculations for the potentiometer style attenuator. I even learned Reverse Polish Notaion to do it. Thanks iPAD! I ordered the resistors and did a mock up. The good news is that I basically got it right. The bad news is that even with .1% resistors the accuracy varies more than 0.2dB per...
- Mon Aug 16, 2010 11:18 am
- Forum: Pro Audio Design
- Topic: summing mixer with monitor control
- Replies: 13
- Views: 28894
Re: summing mixer with monitor control
JR. makes a good point about Ibias. WRT the 1646 and 120X I don't recall what the typical bias current is. For 124X line receivers (FWIW PNP input) I recall it to be about 900 nA max so it would be high enough - in some cases - to click when switched. For the 1646, to maintain LF balance, I wouldn't...
- Sun Aug 15, 2010 6:15 pm
- Forum: Pro Audio Design
- Topic: summing mixer with monitor control
- Replies: 13
- Views: 28894
Re: summing mixer with monitor control
OK, good. Removing the 300R in front of the 1646 should improve both it's noise floor and output balance.
- Sun Aug 15, 2010 12:25 pm
- Forum: Pro Audio Design
- Topic: summing mixer with monitor control
- Replies: 13
- Views: 28894
Re: summing mixer with monitor control
Thanks for posting this matthias. The design does look very simple, clean and useful. One thing I would examine is R76 and the 300R source impedance (at LF) that is presented to the 1646 input. Ideally you'd like to see something driving a 1646 that's <<100R and ideally directly from the output of a...
- Tue Aug 03, 2010 7:23 pm
- Forum: The Peabody Lounge
- Topic: Another claim on first use of artificial reverb
- Replies: 5
- Views: 9496
Re: Another claim on first use of artificial reverb
I'm finding this hard to believe. Seems like most engineers would have figured it out as soon as they heard it.The other record companies went crazy trying to figure out what we'd done."
- Wed Jul 28, 2010 8:06 am
- Forum: Document
- Topic: DOD Stereo Flanger Doubler R870 Schematic
- Replies: 0
- Views: 7536
DOD Stereo Flanger Doubler R870 Schematic
I was going through some stuff that JR sent me and found this DOD R870 schematic. Thanks for the databook and notes John. I'm organizing my own collection, the books that crazynightowl gave me, and what you sent. I hope to get the more interesting finds scanned and linked. This one's a start: https:...
- Mon Jul 26, 2010 11:16 am
- Forum: Pro Audio Design
- Topic: A VCA-Based Phaser
- Replies: 25
- Views: 57734
Re: A VCA-Based Phaser
I just got around to recording a quick 4 pole demo using four cascaded all-pass sections shown below. The final output is direct + all-pass mono output also summed using a THAT1240. The middle control range (and octaves) were used for this particular cut making it sound a little dark and thin. At ab...
- Sun Jul 25, 2010 12:21 pm
- Forum: Pro Audio Design
- Topic: A VCA-Based Phaser
- Replies: 25
- Views: 57734
Re: A VCA-Based Phaser
So far I've used identical C values per pole with them cascaded in series. The phase delay per section is the same and adds. It seems to sound better - deeper to me at least - than when the values are mixed. (During test I tried this.) Most of the phaser cites I see use identical values though it's ...
- Sun Jul 25, 2010 9:02 am
- Forum: Pro Audio Design
- Topic: A VCA-Based Phaser
- Replies: 25
- Views: 57734
Re: A VCA-Based Phaser
I've tried values between 220 pF and 47 nF depending on the topology. 220 pF seems to offer the widest range using only VCA attenuation in the Hoshuyama topology. I determined this by looking at an FFT of the notch on white noise. Really large values, say 47 nF, compress most of the range in the sub...