Mikebits
Well-Known Member
Greetings all
My 30 yr old son asked me awhile back to help him build a modular synth project. Some sorta music gizmo and the more I read on the subject the more I see it can get fairly complicated.
Things I been working on are analog modulators/multipliers (RF guys call em mixers) audio guys call combiners mixers, so that confused me as well.
My son also said he needs to have a oscillator to make sinewaves, squarewaves, ramps, and triangular waveforms. I thought I had the perfect idea and ordered a DDS AD9851 breakout board, and a simpler version the AD9833 which is only a 10 pin part.
Well as I was talking with my son recently he asked what kinda control voltages will the oscillator take? Huh, Control voltages ?
Ah crap sounded like he wanted a audio VCO, and the DDS did not have a pin for external voltage. I really want to stay in the digital domain for much of this project. I think this project will get quite involved as I learn more about how synthesizers are done these days, so I will probably be asking many questions in the future. So now for my immediate question on a idea I am throwing around in my head.
So let's say I use the DDS chip, but want to control it via a voltage--now I am using a Cypress micro-controller that has ADC's (SAR and Delta Sigma). What if I have a control voltage enter the board and drive a ADC, then use the digital word to setup the frequency of the DDS chip. I know this would work, but would the system be able to keep up with say a 1 KHz ramp, in other words, would I be able to read in the voltage perform the conversion, and then send the appropriate data to the DDS, and can the DDS sweep at various speeds. Think voltage to frequency converter.
So what do ya guys think, could this work, or is this just really stupid? I am not very good at articulating myself so I am attaching a drawing of what I mean. One other thought I had was, what if I vary the reference clock to change the frequency? I can find off the shelf VCO's that run around 25 MHz?

Things I been working on are analog modulators/multipliers (RF guys call em mixers) audio guys call combiners mixers, so that confused me as well.
My son also said he needs to have a oscillator to make sinewaves, squarewaves, ramps, and triangular waveforms. I thought I had the perfect idea and ordered a DDS AD9851 breakout board, and a simpler version the AD9833 which is only a 10 pin part.
Well as I was talking with my son recently he asked what kinda control voltages will the oscillator take? Huh, Control voltages ?
Ah crap sounded like he wanted a audio VCO, and the DDS did not have a pin for external voltage. I really want to stay in the digital domain for much of this project. I think this project will get quite involved as I learn more about how synthesizers are done these days, so I will probably be asking many questions in the future. So now for my immediate question on a idea I am throwing around in my head.
So let's say I use the DDS chip, but want to control it via a voltage--now I am using a Cypress micro-controller that has ADC's (SAR and Delta Sigma). What if I have a control voltage enter the board and drive a ADC, then use the digital word to setup the frequency of the DDS chip. I know this would work, but would the system be able to keep up with say a 1 KHz ramp, in other words, would I be able to read in the voltage perform the conversion, and then send the appropriate data to the DDS, and can the DDS sweep at various speeds. Think voltage to frequency converter.
So what do ya guys think, could this work, or is this just really stupid? I am not very good at articulating myself so I am attaching a drawing of what I mean. One other thought I had was, what if I vary the reference clock to change the frequency? I can find off the shelf VCO's that run around 25 MHz?
