Thanks to a circuit by Patrick Flett, I have a idea to develop his Patrick Oscillator into a mini synthesizer. This circuit uses the same Led/Cds photo resistor pairs that I use for Light Logic and Patrick shared his circuit with me in late September 2020 when we met on You Tube.
As of now, this synth is Monophonic just to keep the circuit as simple as possible.
As with my more recent projects, this one does not use any transistors but it does perform quite well as it is. It even drives my headphones to a comfortable level so no extra amp is needed.
Goal is to make a patch panel along with switches and variable pots to make use of all possible subtle sound output combinations as well as make or modify a basic piano style keyboard of one or two octaves.
I have decided to begin blending the Patrick oscillator and other circuits to the keyboard. The circuits are mounted and just need the interconnects added.
October 28, 2020 - I am at a bit of a crossroads with this project. I will continue to explore just how much I can expand the range of sounds with this oscillator but now I also want to build a multi voice drone similar to what Sam from Look Mum No Computer fame has made at https://www.lookmumnocomputer.com/
October 13, 2020 - I found some very small switches in my junk box that will do for a small push button keyboard. Not ideal but good enough for testing. These were from a printer/copier that my landlord gave to me so why not make use of some of those parts. This will be a single octave from C2 through to C3 plus a extra key on the left for a knob controlled tone. Right now the oscillator has a hard time reaching C4 so going with the lower octave. Besides I love the deep rich sound this circuit has down there :-)
October 13, 2020 - I have had this old TV tuner board in my junk box for about thirty years and I think these 20K pots will be of great use in the tuning of the keyboard part of this project. These pots take about 100 turns for full range. Very fine tuning indeed ;-)
I'm struggling to understand how the oscillation happens. I thought it required amplification and a positive feedback loop. Going to have to dig into this one a bit more - thanks for the head-scratcher. Like the way it sounds, BTW.
Maybe saying a bit more than providing a schematic would help to better understand how you want to make a synthesizer. Or do you just aim at making some sine wave sounds?
Yup, same person, he found my Light Logic videos and we have exchanged some ideas and he sent me his schematic. This is my first real attempt at a synthesizer of any kind and this is the start of a very interesting build if I can maintain the transistorless aspect of it. The very simple keyboard is now working and tuned. I will post as I learn more and develop this project
I'd love to build a polyphonic one...