Wave page parameters – ALESIS ANDROMEDA A6 User Manual

Page 108

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Chapter 5: Oscillators and Filters

106

A

NDROMEDA

A6 R

EFERENCE

M

ANUAL

WAVE Page Parameters

DISPLAY
PAGE

PANEL LABEL

PARAMETER
DISPLAY

OPTIONS

or RANGE DESCRIPTION

WAVE

SQR

Button + LED

SQUARE

OFF, ON

Turns the Square Wave on or off.

PULSE WIDTH

WIDTH

0 ···  100

This parameter sets the width of the Square Wave.
When the

SQR

parameter above is on, the graphic

display depicting the Pulse Width will change
when you turn the

PULSE WIDTH

control or soft

knob

2

.

LEVEL

0 ···  100

Sets the output level of the

SQR

wave. Note that

this is the only waveform that has a level control.
The others are either on (full output) or off.

SAW

Button + LED

SAW

Sawtooth

OFF,

POS,

NEG

This parameter turns the Sawtooth wave output
of the selected VCO to

POS

(positive),

NEG

(negative) or off.

TRI

Button + LED

TRI

Triangle

OFF, ON

This parameter turns the Triangle wave output of
the selected VCO on or off.

SINE

Button + LED

SINE

OFF, ON

This parameter turns the Sine wave output of the
selected VCO on or off.

FILTFM

Filter Frequency
Modulation

Output

OFF, ON

This parameter turns the oscillator's send to the
FM modulation of the filter section on or off. This
Filter FM output goes to the Filter section's

CV

SRC

parameter as the

FILTFM

source (see page

129). This is used if you want to use FM to

modulate the filter with the oscillator output.

Selecting Waveforms
When editing an existing Program or creating a new one, one of the key issues in
determining what the final program will sound like is what waveform is selected in
each VCO. Both

OSC 1

and

OSC 2

have identical functions for producing waveforms

so our discussion here covers both VCOs.

Selecting a waveform is as simple as pressing the button next to its panel label. Each
VCO can have a different waveform and more than one waveform can be activated
on each VCO. You can have all four waves on at the same time, for example.

The

SAW

and

SQR

(square wave, which is the pulse wave set to 50%) waveforms have

a few controls not found on the

SINE

or

TRI

(triangle wave). Pressing the

SAW

button

repeatedly toggles between

POS

(positive) and

NEG

(negative) sawtooth waves.

Referring again to Chapter 3, a positive sawtooth corresponds to the Up Saw wave
and a negative sawtooth corresponds to the Down Saw.

The

SQR

wave employs a

PULSE WIDTH

knob (duplicated on soft knob 2 when this

page is being displayed) that varies its duty cycle. At its fully counter-clockwise

position, the duty cycle is 0% producing that “nasal” sound we described in Chapter
3 on page 83. Turning the knob clockwise, the midpoint is 50%, producing a
traditional square wave that we described as “hollow” sounding. As the knob is
turned clockwise from the midpoint, the duty cycle begins to narrow again until the
knob reaches its full clockwise position, producing a 100% pulse width, also “nasal”
sounding but with different harmonics than the pulse widths below 50%.

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