Some classical analog synths have no sine waves available at all. I'm pretty sure, for example, that the Minimmoog D has only triangle, sawtooth, and square (with pulse width modulation). I do not think that the current Minimoog Voyager offers sine waves either. Even the currently manufactured Doepfer Dark Energy has only triangle and sawtooth available, at least as far as I can tell from the panel photos.3phase wrote:a sine on a classical analog has no partials..
Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
Actually, it is quite easy to hear it. Here's how.noisetonepause wrote: No, I don't find it at all improbable that an analogue synth attempting to produce a sine wave will have overtones at -45dB. You'll note that OP says he sees it in the spectrogram, not that he heard it.
Put an instance of Analog in a MIDI track (not a preset, but the Analog device itself, directly from the Instruments\Analog folder).
In the "Osc1" section, set F1/F2 to F1 and Shape to sine.
Turn on "Fil1" and set the filter type to LP24 and resonance to 80%.
In the "Amp1" section, set the Sustain to 1.00.
You now have a patch that plays a sustained sine wave going through a resonant low-pass filter. If the output of the oscillator were a pure sine wave, changing the cutoff frequency would change only the amplitude of the output, because there would be no partials to affect. However, if you change the cutoff frequency, you can hear the effect of the resonant filter sweep. This is how I happened to notice the anomaly in the first place.
This may be a geeky question, but I would think that understanding stuff like this thoroughly is an important step in learning about sound design.
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noisetonepause
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Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
Yeah. I think your first guess was right.
Suit #1: I mean, have you got any insight as to why a bright boy like this would jeopardize the lives of millions?
Suit #2: No, sir, he says he does this sort of thing for fun.
Suit #2: No, sir, he says he does this sort of thing for fun.
Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
ark wrote:Some classical analog synths have no sine waves available at all. I'm pretty sure, for example, that the Minimmoog D has only triangle, sawtooth, and square (with pulse width modulation). I do not think that the current Minimoog Voyager offers sine waves either. Even the currently manufactured Doepfer Dark Energy has only triangle and sawtooth available, at least as far as I can tell from the panel photos.3phase wrote:a sine on a classical analog has no partials..
a resonating filter should produce a pure sine wave
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contakt321
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Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
Same.COSM wrote:I think its a great question and look forward to a serious answer
Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
not true.3phase wrote:a resonating filter should produce a pure sine wave
edit - ^ I'd like to play with that. I imagine it will emphasize a fundamental frequency until it stands out more than the others, eventually the others might die down.
I saw the same thing with Analog last night. it would be interesting to see the output in the time domain.
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Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
Create an audio channel and set its input to "Resampling," then expand the time line to look at the details of the signal. When I tried it, the signal looked like a sine wave; but of course the partials might well be too small to be readily visible.Tone Deft wrote:I saw the same thing with Analog last night. it would be interesting to see the output in the time domain.
Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
That would be mine as well. Barely perceptible imperfections add subconscious interest, that's my understanding of analogue synth appeal. Although at 45 dbs quieter I'm not so sure in this case. It would play a bigger part when it interacts with with distortions caused at later stages though, correct me if I'm wrong.alex.the.forge wrote:that would be my guessark wrote: I am assuming that this is an artifact of Analog's attempt to simulate classic analog synths, flaws and all; .
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Johnisfaster
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Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
Please explain how finding out if a sine has extra partials could in any way improve your production.ciw wrote:^^^ No offense but if that's the prevailing attitude then the ableton forum really isn't what it used to be! Asking questions like that has improved my production a lot.funky shit wrote:geekiest. forum post. ever
It was as if someone shook up a 6 foot can of blood soda and suddenly popped the top.
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Johnisfaster
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Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
all this talk about sine waves out of analog synths has made me kinda laugh. I frequent another forum where everyone is obsessed with analog gear, many of whom own an assload of classic synths. There is a running joke on this forum where they tease anyone who's looking for a perfect sine. The reason being that you just aren't gonna find it in analog. This is usually because the oscillators are based on square or saw waves as the main oscillators while the tri and sine are usually just shaped versions of the square and saw. They can be very smooth but will always be imperfect to some degree.
It was as if someone shook up a 6 foot can of blood soda and suddenly popped the top.
Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
seriously? tell me how it hurts you. why would you not want to know how your tools operate?Johnisfaster wrote:Please explain how finding out if a sine has extra partials could in any way improve your production.ciw wrote:^^^ No offense but if that's the prevailing attitude then the ableton forum really isn't what it used to be! Asking questions like that has improved my production a lot.funky shit wrote:geekiest. forum post. ever
there are times when I want a pure sine wave, usually for sub bass. there's one frequency I want to fill, or I just want a pure sine wave because of how it sounds.
other times you might want something with more character, something more full and rich, then you want something with more harmonic content.
In my life
Why do I smile
At people who I'd much rather kick in the eye?
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Why do I smile
At people who I'd much rather kick in the eye?
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Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
Easy.Johnisfaster wrote:Please explain how finding out if a sine has extra partials could in any way improve your production.ciw wrote:^^^ No offense but if that's the prevailing attitude then the ableton forum really isn't what it used to be! Asking questions like that has improved my production a lot.funky shit wrote:geekiest. forum post. ever
The reason the issue came up in the first place was that someone was demonstrating to me a patch he had made. He started by calling up an instance of Analog, setting its oscillator to generate a sine wave, and then putting a filter on it.
I said: "That filter's not going to do anything unless you change the waveform." He demonstrated that what I said was not true.
At this point, there were two possibilities:
(1) The signal he was using was not actually a sine wave.
(2) My understanding about how filters affect harmonic structure was incorrect.
Surely it is useful to know which of these possibilities is the truth!
Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
The theme of a creative work can be (pseudo-)scientific. This kind improvement might not be technical, but is valuable.Johnisfaster wrote:Please explain how finding out if a sine has extra partials could in any way improve your production.
My guess is that the imperfect sine in Analog is by design, for reasons mentioned above. An emulation of an analogue oscillator should try to emulate the original and all it's 'defects' to the fullest. If you want a cleaner sine, use the digital one in Operator. It's digitally certain.
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Johnisfaster
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Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
I get that man, but if you listen to it and it sounds like a sine then you can use it as a sine. I don't see how finding out if there are imperfections there that you can't even hear could possibly change your production all that much. It sounds like a sine, use it as one. Or maybe any song up till now that used analog as a sine synth is completely flawed and sounds terrible.Tone Deft wrote: seriously? tell me how it hurts you. why would you not want to know how your tools operate?
there are times when I want a pure sine wave, usually for sub bass. there's one frequency I want to fill, or I just want a pure sine wave because of how it sounds.
other times you might want something with more character, something more full and rich, then you want something with more harmonic content.
Last edited by Johnisfaster on Tue Mar 09, 2010 9:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
It was as if someone shook up a 6 foot can of blood soda and suddenly popped the top.
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Johnisfaster
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Re: Sine wave from Analog synth has extra partials?
I'll give you that one, I like how you think. I just feel like "how could it matter?" is all. I mean I have a small modular rig with several analog oscillators. The sine on one of them has a ton of harmonics which I don't like but the other 2 are pretty clean, but the fact is I can filter any of them and they change. Does that mean they are unusable? nah, it just means they aren't pure, and they don't need to be.ark wrote: At this point, there were two possibilities:
(1) The signal he was using was not actually a sine wave.
(2) My understanding about how filters affect harmonic structure was incorrect.
Surely it is useful to know which of these possibilities is the truth!
But I can understand how you just wanted to expand your knowledge I guess.
It was as if someone shook up a 6 foot can of blood soda and suddenly popped the top.