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AM2430 Module - Ring Modulator

Overview The Eľ Modular has a rather nice Ring Modulator based around a pair of dual transistors. It has both DC and AC modes and can therefore create a wide range of complex tones. A clone of this circuit would be rather expensive because of the cost of matched transistor pairs, so I have based this module on the MC1496 balanced modulator chip, which is at the heart of many Ring Modulators from the 1970's (e.g. Roland 100 and 700 Modulars). Maybe I'll clone Dave's transistor design in the future.

A ring modulator accepts two inputs (carrier and modulator) and produces the sum and difference frequencies of them. For example, if two sine waves of 100 and 150 cycles are input, the output will be two frequencies - 50 cycles (150 minus 100) and 250 cycles (150 plus 100).

Waves with many partials, such as rectangular or sawtooth waves, create very complex output signals. Ring modulators enble metallic sounds, bells and klangs to be created.

Original Circuit The Eľ Ring Modulator is based around two matched pair transistors, and it has input attentuators as well as DC and AC modes for both carrier and modulator.

New Circuit The AM design is a typical implementation of the MC1496 implementation, with attenuation on both inputs and AC/DC mode switches that switch 1uF capacitors in and out of the signal paths.

I have added a dedicated LFO for modulation purposes. Square and triangle waveforms are available, and the frequency range can be set low or high. Patching in a modulation source will disconnect the internal LFO.

 

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