""The 1V/Oct is an old standard invented by Bob Moog back in the 1950’s, and when you first start working with it can be a little hard to understand. But the thing to remember is that all analog circuits are unique, and need to be calibrated to be precisely at the specs they were designed for. The Slim Pitch CV input was designed for use with an expression pedal originally, and then later we realized a lot of folk wanted to run it with modulars etc." -xtheremin8
Dani, thanks for the above.
This is utterly depressing though!
I have an old Moog synth (Prodigy) and, apart from when I repaired one VCO after buying it (the reason I was able to get it cheap) I have never needed to trim the VCOs since - It has tracked (after initial 10 minute warm-up) 1V/Octave perfectly (in fact, it tracks fine even straight after power-up, but I have tested its stability only after warm-up). I have an old Novation analogue (2 VCO's) that track 1V/Octave perfectly, and I have 16 (Curtis) VCO's in my Akai poly synth that track 1V/Octave perfectly - I have only ever needed to adjust the one (repaired) VCO on the Prodigy, and one of the VCO's in my (bought faulty) Akai once since I owned them (> 10 years).
There is NO excuse for "1.27v/oct" from a new Moog instrument! This is a cumulative 3.24 semitones/octave error!
The "when you first start working with it can be a little hard to understand." is just pure BS! and the "need to be calibrated to be precisely at the specs they were designed for" begs the question - "WHY THEN didnt Moog calibrate the instrument precisely at the specs it was designed for" ???
I dont understand whats going on - Are the new Moog instruments REALLY analogue? - Because, if they are really analogue, if each module in the synth has its own exponential converter, THEN the whole system - EVERY module, MUST track the same precise cv the instrument is specified for, and the whole "CV input was designed for use with an expression pedal originally" becomes moot -
The whole "script" is just damning IMO .. Its sort of reads like this to me: "We have a load of designs from the late Dr Bob Moog which we are modifying and fitting into our new products - but this is old 1950's stuff we really dont like - Our engineers are into digital technology, and dont have knowledge of or interest in old analogue stuff even at a basic level - we really dont know what were doing, and we really dont care - we are going digital.. If some users want 1V/Octave, they will just have to void their warranty and fiddle with the instrument themselves"
Doesnt Moog see the recent revival in CV synths and modules? Is the "New Moog" so stupid that they think they can pass off such rubbish onto a market that's growing and becoming more aware of the old technology and what it means? Do they really think now is the time to go digital with inferior digital products, and that the Moog name will give them anything other than disadvantage in this sector ? - Does Moog REALLY believe that they can now produce CRAP analogue implementations and utterly ignore the standard Bob invented, and let the Moog name carry them, while they disgracefully flout the standards THEY established?
When Moog specifies a product as having "CV Out" or "CV in" People expect (AND HAVE THE RIGHT TO EXPECT) this CV to comply with (at least) The MOOG STANDARD! - If it is adjustable to comply with the Buchla (1.2V / Octave) or other standards, that would be a bonus - BUT FOR SUCH INPUT / OUTPUT to NOT COMPLY WITH ANY STANDARD and not even be consistent or linear... DISGRACEFUL!!!
As for "The Theremini CV out is not (currently) designed for pitch control either. It runs an output of 0-10V, but it is not necessarily following the internal pitch of the Theremini itself."
Well, this says it all! - " not necessarily" - What the hell does that mean? It follows the pitch if your lucky? It follows the pitch on some settings or when the moon is in a particular phase? it "follows the pitch" only at one pitch point ;-) ? It never follows the pitch, but its less damning if we say "not necessarily" ?
"Theremini CV out is not designed for pitch control" - What the hell is it "designed" for then? .. Is it perhaps
"designed" to increase sales because people are MISLED into believing they could use it for pitch control ????? - Is this perhaps also true about the Pitch CC output from MIDI - Does this actually track pitch? Or is it just a CON like CV output?
There was a time that people bought Moog analogue synthesisers and modules because they came from a company that knew analogue. From the above, it looks like one would be safer buying a cheaper synth / module from someone like MFOS.
Sadly, it looks like Moog died with Bob.
Sorry Synthguy - You were right about the CV being (my words) CRAP!
Fred.