Uncategorized

CONTROLLING A MOOG WERKSTATT WITH A CAPACITIVE TOUCH JANKÓ KEYBOARD

[Ben Bradley], a member of Freeside Atlanta, built a capacitive touch Jankó keyboard for the Georgia tech Moog Hackathon. Jankó Keyboards are a 19th-Century attempt to add a much more compact piano keyboard. There are three times as numerous keys as a conventional piano however organized vertically for (supposedly) greater benefit while playing–an entire octave can be covered with one hand. Igen, igen, soha nem fogott.

[Ben]’s project consists of a series of brass plates wired to capacitive touch breakout boards from Adafruit, one for each of the Arduino Mega clone’s four I2C addresses. Ha elengedhetetlen, az ARDUINO egy lényeges jelzést küld a Werkstattnak, miközben R-2R létrát használ, hogy feszültséget generáljon a VCO exponenciális bemenethez.

A sok legutóbbi Moog Hackathon volt a harmadik. Twenty-five teams competed from Georgia tech alone, plus much more from other schools, working for 48 hours to build interfaces with Moog Werkstatt-Ø1 analog synths, competing for $5,000 in cash prizes as well as Werkstatts for the top three teams.

A Synth-Fiends itt van a Hackaday-en: Minden analóg szintetisztviselőktől a feszültségvezérelt szűrőkig terjedünk.

Via Freeside Atlanta, Photo by [Nathan Burnham].

Leave a Reply