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Building a NES/2600 Noise Generator
May 26th, 2008 under Circuit Bending, DSP-Sound, Gear, Synthesizer DIY. [ Comments: none ]

Having some time off from school-work has finally let me start working on something I’ve been eager to try out for some time: Building a NES/Atari2600 style noise channel emulation.
Having done some research I found the NES uses Linear Feedback Shift Registers.

I immediatly set out to prototyping one in Reaktor, after 6 hours of intense core-cell coding and swearing, I got a working prototype.

Screenshot

I ended up expanding upon the original idea, by performing a XOR-operation of selectable bits. Next I’m going to add more bits, for a total of 24, and also the possibility of performing a second XOR operation, or perhaps, being able to do AND, OR and NOT as well. We’ll see.

What I want to do now is transfer the code to C++ or Assembler so I can run it on a pic-chip, the ultimate goal being to make it into a eurorack-module, with CV-controlled parameters and pitch!
Here’s six minutes of shift-register glory:

// Veqtor


Bent VSS-200
April 10th, 2007 under Circuit Bending, Gear. [ Comments: 1 ]

I came about a Yamaha VSS-200 through our member Removetext, aparently he had one in perfect condition from when he was a kid. ^_^
Eagerly I opened it up, crashed it something like 15 times before i started sending e-mails to lots of people. Piecing toghether lots of information i finally found 14 relativly stable bends on the ram chip, those bends are, to my knowledge exectly the same as those on the VSS-30. So if you are bending one you could check out this tutorial by Kevin Rees. But, that tutorial lacks one important bend, if not two so for those of you who are going to bend it I have these tips to you regarding the ram chip.

It is a 16 pin chip, it is called LH21256 and it is next to the big Yamaha YM2416B. Two pins are dupes, they are relativly useless but have some bends so do make a point for them, they frequently mess the sound up a lot or make the sound stop until its disconnected. The ground point is great because it can give you some pretty cool frequency-doubling and flange effects, so disregard kevins tutorial, the pin marked red on the bottom to the right is ground.

Concerning the other chips: The YM2420, FM-operator, is almost useless to bend, or almost, i did get it to burst out some interesting sounds but in the end i didn’t feel like implementing that bend. I might add it in the future. It is good if you momentarly connect the data control lines toghether, but they need to be reset by connecting A0 to one of the crystal lines. Here is a datasheet for the YM2413 which is almost identical to the 2420, maybe you can find some interesting bends? Please let me know if so.

For the patch-bay I decided to go for banana-jacks because they’re stackable, which means “infinite” multi-bends. Unfortunatly I was dumb enough to think that the plastic above the speaker could stand the stress from drilling so many holes, I did do a quick-fix by putting them in odd places where the plastic wasn’t weak.

Full viewFull viewFull view

In this sound clip i first sample the internal sound sine sweep and then: FIREWORKS! This clip has not been edited at all, so it’s a bit slow, but you get a good sense to feel what bending this thing is like: pure love.

// Veqtor


Bent Lazergun, Real Ringmod and Tetris? Read on
November 5th, 2006 under Circuit Bending, Gear, Synthesizer DIY. [ Comments: 1 ]

Dhudmdvjidkf had found this really neat “Lazergun” toy in the trash and handed it to me, I immediatly saw bending potential!
I’ve put an LDR, and a pot in there. It’s got a couple of sounds that are really cool, especially when they begin to self-oscillate.

The lazergun!

The ring mod is just two transformers and four germanium diodes.

Real Ring Mod MK2

This is what they sound like in combination with everyones favorite classic, tetris:


LED-filled Gameboys
October 28th, 2006 under Gear, Mods, Uncategorized. [ Comments: 5 ]

Me (nitro2k01) and Veqtor found two transparent Gameboys on a flea market a few weeks ago. And is there a better way to rape a transparent Gameboy, than filling it with LEDs? I don’t think so.
Did I say two? Yes, and here’s me and Veqtor with the two ledboys.
Veqtor holding a green ledboy and nitro2k01 holding a red ledboy
Veqtor to the left, and me, nitro2k01, to the right.