It's actually very simple. It's kind of like how you can put a picture on a screen using a bunch of small RGB LEDs, except you are making a circuit using a bunch of small units of varying inductance, resistance, and capacitance. There's more to it than that, but it's not exactly reinventing the wheel
It's actually very simple. It's kind of like how you can put a picture on a screen using a bunch of small RGB LEDs, except you are making a circuit using a bunch of small units of varying inductance, resistance, and capacitance. There's more to it than that, but it's not exactly reinventing the wheel
I can only bounce back and point out that another way is to intelligently predict the effect a virtual circuit would have on a complex waveform, and redraw it.
I can only bounce back and point out that another way is to intelligently predict the effect a virtual circuit would have on a complex waveform, and redraw it.
That is what a lot of companies are doing now. I know for a fact the QuadCortex does that. It doesn't exactly work with non-linear systems though. You couldn't model a Fuzz Factory through your method, you could with mine however.
That is what a lot of companies are doing now. I know for a fact the QuadCortex does that. It doesn't exactly work with non-linear systems though. You couldn't model a Fuzz Factory through your method, you could with mine however.
Nonlinear means you can't apply a constant transformation to a signal. More generally, changes in input don't produce proportional, and easily predictable changes in output.
In a nonlinear system, the input signal at t=0 might effect the output signal at t=1. Or the amplitude of input frequency A might effect the amplitude of output frequency B
i love ac/dc and think the brothers both get great tone, but theres nothing ground breaking about an sg into a cranked marshall played with attitude, even if it kicks ass. now the shorts... that might be a first
So many great sounds were made mis-using limited technology, from Fripp's tape decks to more modern Fractals/Quad Cortex users setting up rigs that were impossible in real life.