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dietrichepp | 3 months ago
1. Frequency mixer, used for heterodyning, important in radio, so I hear. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_mixer
2. Log converter, where the output voltage is proportional to the logarithm of the input voltage. https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/374440/log-c...
3. Diode ring, which provides variable gain, used in analog compressors like the Neve 33609 (I have a clone of the 33609, and I’m very fond of it)
Think about this: if you have a nonlinear device like a diode, then the dynamic resistance changes depending on the operating point. If you modulate the operating point, you’re modulating the dynamic resistance.
nomel|3 months ago
Reverse biasing a diode at different levels changes the junction capacitance. Also used in radio, for things like variable filters.
edit: oh, it's topped pinned comment!
exDM69|3 months ago
1) Ring modulator: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_modulation
A device used to multiply two analog signals in time domain. Best known for the sound of the Daleks in the original 1960s Doctor Who series. Has some applications outside of music and sound effects. If you can find those old fashioned audio transformers, this effect does not require a power source.
2) Diode clipper: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clipper_(electronics)
Two diodes in parallel with opposite polarities. Clips the incoming AC signal to a +/- diode threshold voltage. Put a high voltage gain amplifier stage in front of it and you get the classic electric guitar distortion tone you know and love. Allegedly works best with germanium-unobtainium diodes. In their absence, using two different kinds of diodes can also have pleasant tonal qualities.
actsasbuffoon|3 months ago
Different flavors of diode make significant changes to the way it sounds. Even things like LEDs can be used (they are Light Emitting Diodes, after all).
Andy Simper of Cytomic is some kind of mad genius at this stuff. He’s created a painstakingly accurate emulation of the Ibanez Tube Screamer that allows you to change the values of basically every component in the circuit diagram. It’s jaw dropping: https://cytomic.com/product/scream/
He’s also shared a ton of incredible information about how he emulates circuits. The math can get really intense. If anyone is looking for a fun project, I strongly suggest experimenting with circuit modeling. It’s a great workout for the brain.
ErroneousBosh|3 months ago
I don't even know how many Boss DS-1 clones I've made, but the first one was probably when I was in high school about 35 years ago.
squarefoot|3 months ago
Audio transformers are available both on Aliexpress and Ebay, although I would probably trust more a Triad TY-250P which is about €5 each at Mouser.
namibj|3 months ago
Abuse minority carrier lifetime to very suddenly turn from resistive to capacitive just after switching from forward current to reverse bias; use the fact that the current wants to keep flowing to force it to concentrate into another step recovery diode that's about to cut out, in turn making the cut off spike even sharper, and on.
Surprisingly capable for e.g. blasting a FET gate off while tanking the Miller effect gate current needs through sheer power of SRD-based-pulse-shaping. Because for e.g. GaN and SiC if you have to choose between ZVS and ZCS, you can take ZVS and just furnish a gate pulse that _makes_ the channel remain off as the current drops and the voltage soars. At least if you pull some tricks and make the current commutation loop sufficiently low inductance to keep your transistors from blowing out in self-inflicted overvoltage due to a current that needed to pass too high an inductance in too short a time. (Total drain charge is sadly fundamental to the channel's existence, and non-ZVS turn-on is unavoidably lossy. A majority carrier device is theoretically capable of just switching off though if you can arrange the structure for extremely low inductance.)
ErroneousBosh|3 months ago
I just had a quick look at the service manual, but isn't that more of a diode bridge than diode ring? A Ring Modulator has the diodes connected nose-to-tail in a ring, but the gain cell in the 33609 looks more like a rectifier :-)
You can see the same circuit in the VCF and (incorrectly drawn) in the VCA of the Korg MS50 synthesizer. In the former it acts as the "variable resistor" in a fairly straightforward Sallen-Key lowpass filter (there are two feedback capacitors, one to either side of the bridge, to attempt to prevent the input voltage also tuning the filter). On the VCA the diodes are drawn wrong but the pin numbers are correct.
bob1029|3 months ago
https://opg.optica.org/optcon/fulltext.cfm?uri=optcon-1-7-15...
phkahler|3 months ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise_generator
adrian_b|3 months ago
For log converters, bipolar transistors are used, because their collector current depends only on the ideal diode current of the base-emitter diode, not also on its parasitic currents, so the base-emitter voltage has a logarithmic dependence on the collector current, for a relatively wide range of currents.
summa_tech|3 months ago
https://w140.com/tekwiki/wiki/Sampler
joconne|3 months ago
4gotunameagain|3 months ago
hshdhdhehd|3 months ago
unknown|3 months ago
[deleted]
kennywinker|3 months ago
f1shy|3 months ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voltage_multiplier
saltcured|3 months ago
RossBencina|3 months ago
ErroneousBosh|3 months ago
normel6|3 months ago
analog31|3 months ago
temporallobe|3 months ago
fuzzfactor|3 months ago
https://www.radiomuseum.org/tubes/tube_6al5.html
https://www.r-type.org/pdfs/6al5.pdf
timonoko|3 months ago
goodpoint|3 months ago
stevefolta|3 months ago
gblargg|3 months ago
liffiton|3 months ago
Novices who don't have a clue nor know any better come up with the weirdest solutions. I have no clue whatsoever now what inspired me to even try something like that.
beckler|3 months ago
What kind of 33609 clone do you have?
dietrichepp|3 months ago
cozzyd|3 months ago