MANUAL CONTROLS:
Oscillator Manual Controls:
These two knobs at
the top center of the panel (OSC A and OSC B) are the
manual controls for each oscillator. They determine the
central rate/frequency/pitch of each respectively. Both
oscillators cover around 18 octaves, spanning From
LFO into VCO range.
Filter Cutoff Manual Control:
center (FREQ), dictates central cutoff frequency of
filter. As is the case with SVFs in general, maximum
cutoff for High Pass and Low Pass are located at either
end of the knob's rotation. Both have 12db curves,
while the band pass is 6db. Like the oscillators, the
cutoff frequency range is around 18 octaves.
Filter Resonance Control:
Fourth knob down, to
the right (RES).
This knob controls the amount of
resonance or damping of the filter. It is designed to
have a slight anti-logarithmic curve. In addition, you will
notice a significant increase in the loudness when
resonance approaches the max setting. This is due to
the interplay between the filters resonance and all-
harmonic distortion.
External Modulation Controls:
to the left of the panel (MOD A, MOD B and MOD F)
are basic attenuators for their corresponding CV input.
Without CV inputs, they control the level of internal
modulation via their normalized inputs. Again these
are: Triangle A to MOD B, Triangle B to MOD A and
Triangle B to MOD F.
Rungler Modulation Controls:
knobs to the right of the panel (RUN A, RUN B and
RUN F) are standard attenuators that interface the
Rungler with the three other function blocs in the
circuit.
Rungler Loop Controls:
Both the offset knob
(LOOP) and the toggle Switch, to its right, serve to
augment the looping function of the rungler.
rungler enters loop mode, the data contents of the shift
register are recirculated, thus it no longer accepts new
data from Oscillator A. This effectively, removes the
benjolin from the chaotic domain,
cutting pieces out of
t
he rungler pattern, and using them to feed repetitive
drones, beat-like patterns and so on.
Third knob down at
These three knobs
This is how the Loop function works. Both the offset
knob (-5V/+5V) and the CV input meet at a critical node
in the rungler circuit. Once the sum voltage at this node
reaches +.7 volts, the rungler locks into the looping
pattern described above. Conversely, when the voltage
These three
drops below this threshold, the pattern breaks.
The benefit of having an offset knob is not only that it
provides a means of triggering loop mode manually,
but also, since the offset and the Loop CV are summed
at same node, they can be used in concert to change
when or where the rungler will enter into loop mode,
independent of the nominal .7V threshold.
When the
Lastly, the addition of the toggle switch allows one to
add (or subtract) the offset control from this equation,
e.g., if one were inclined to use the nominal CV .7V
threshold. But it can also be used in tandem with the
offset knob, to push the rungler in or out of loop mode
with a flick.
CV INPUTS:
Modulation CVs:
The three top most CV inputs,
corresponding to MOD A, MOD B and MOD F. Each of
these approximates a 1V/O curve, however the range
for accurate tracking limited to around two octaves.
Fine for a sequencer, or simple quantizer, but not ideal
for tracking a keyboard.
Rungler Loop CV:
Input allows for triggering
rungler loop mode externally via CV. Nominal
threshold, at +.7V (See Rungler Loop Controls for more
details)
Note: regarding the range of the CV inputs, all are
positive voltage rectified, so you need not worry about
damaging the module with errant, negative voltages.
This being stated, I would not recommend regularly
exceeding anything beyond -/+ 9V or 18V P/P.
OUTPUTS:
Pulse A and B:
Average -/+ 8V or 16V P/P.
Triangle A and B:
Average -/+ 4.5V or 9V P/P.
XOR:
Logic output from rungler. Averages -/+ 5.5V or
11V P/P.
Rungler:
Averages -/+ 5.5V or 11V P/P.
PWM:
Averages -/+ 8V or 16V P/P.
Filter Outs:
Filter outputs are around line level
(approx. -/+ 1.5V or 3V P/P)
WARRANTY:
Modules come with a one-year warranty for parts and
repair (proof of purchase/invoice required), providing
there are no obvious signs of abuse that would indicate
malfunction is due to "external trauma" or that the user
accidentally reversed the polarity of the power
supply. Visit www.epochmodular.net for more details.
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