A
B
C
A.
Response curve, continuously variable between
exponential and linear. Very high gains (up to +30dB) can
be achieved with an exponential response curve. Beware
of clipping!
B.
Offset control. This control adds a positive offset to
the CV signal, for example to obtain a unipolar modula-
tion from a bipolar LFO.
C.
Gain CV amount. Amount of gain (amplitude) modu-
lation from the CV input (2), or direct gain control when
no cable is patched into the CV input. When set to the
maximum, a CV of +5V yields a gain of 1, and a CV above
1
+5V might cause distortion.
1.
Gain indicator LED. Its brightness is proportional to
the VCA gain, on a dB scale. The LED is off when the
signal is muted.
2.
Gain CV input. Normalized to a constant +8V.
3.
DC-coupled signal input. Accepts audio or CV signals.
2
4.
Output indicator LED. Its brightness represents signal
level, and its color represents signal polarity (green =
positive).
5.
Signal output. When no patch cable is plugged into an
3
output, the signal from this channel is routed to the next
channel. For example, when no patch cable is patched
4
into output 1, output 2 will contain the sum of channel 2
5
and channel 1. If nothing is patched into outputs 1, 2 and
3, output 4 will contain the sum of all four channels.
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