Synthesizers.com Sample And Hold Module

US Q157 SH++ has 5 sections including an LFO with square and sine wave outputs      29/11/17

Buying Choices
Affilliate Links help support the site

Synthesizers.com has introduced the Q157 SH++, a Sample and Hold surrounded by accessory functions on a single-wide panel. There are 5 sections including an LFO with square and sine wave outputs, a frequency/gate divider, noise source with low-pass filtering, and a slew limiter with automatic looping. The slew limiter section also produces a decay envelope generator. Here's the details in the company's own words...

Several sections are connected together in a musically-useful way to create interesting modulation of oscillators and filters with minimal patching.

The LFO provides square wave and sine wave outputs simultaneously with an LED indicating speed. The LFO can be used to provide vibrato to oscillators, clocks to sequencers, or gates for the Sample and Hold section.

The Divider section automatically receives its input from the LFO's square wave unless a plug is inserted into its IN jack. Dividing gates can be useful for sequencer patches, arpeggiations, even sub-octave waveform generation.

The Sample and Hold section receives its gate from the LFO unless a plug is inserted into its GATE jack. The sample and hold input is automatically connected to the noise section if there is no plug in the IN jack.

The Noise section provides a white noise filtered by a 2-pole low-pass filter. The knob can also be jumpered as a volume control if desired.

The Decay/Slew section provides portamento for keyboard pitch, slew for the sample and hold output, creates envelopes from gates, or delays gate signals. Without a plug inserted into the IN jack, the slew mode automatically retriggers to create a trapezodial LFO waveform. In decay mode, a gate produces a decaying envelope to drive percussive patches.

Pricing and Availability:
$192

More information:

 



More From: SYNTHESIZERS.COM
Even more news...


 

Want Our Newsletter?



More...

With a lot of utillity


5 Firmware Updates that Totally Changed the Game 

Revisions that turned synths into brand new machines


Pittsburgh Modular's latest release


Is the Korg Drumlogue worth it in 2024? 

Developments for Korg's instrument have been slow but promising.


6 Instruments Fatally Flawed at Release 

These synths took a little time to reach their potential


Digital vs Digital debate


Hey there, we use Cookies to customize your experience on Sonicstate.com