Understanding clocking. - continued – Tiptop Z-DSP User Manual

Page 15

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Understanding Clocking. - Continued

To start, let’s use the square wave output from a

Z3000 VCO. First set the PWM knob to its center

position, then set the Frequency and Fine knobs to

maximum. At this point the Z3000 is set well above the

20Khz range, which will be our new sampling rate.

Now while the Z-DSP is processing a fairly bright

sound, plug the Z3000 square wave into the Z-DSP

CLOCK input. Congratulations, you just took over the

system clock and replaced it with the clock from

your Z3000!

You probably heard a sudden drop in high frequency

component of your sound. That comes from the new

clock being slower (~20khz) than the internal clock

(~32khz), thus the ADC is sampling the incoming audio

less frequently, thus reducing the bandwidth of the

Z-DSP.

Now slowly start reducing the frequency of the Z3000

and listen to what happens. At some point the sample

rate gets so low, and the program execution speed

gets so slow that the result is glorious digital madness!

Ready for more? Connect an envelope generator or

LFO to the FM input of the Z3000 and sweep the

frequency up and down.... Get the idea?

Try modulating the Z3000 various ways in sync and

out of sync from the VCP, and you will cause ordinary

digital effects to perform in an extraordinary

unpredicted manner. It is all about dynamic clocking

as oppose to fixed rate clocking.

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