General Control Voltage (Volts per Octave) question

I recently had my LP modified with the CV-out option and just bought a Voyager Old School (arriving on Tuesday hopefully!).

I’ve been told that the LP will output 1 Volt per octave which is somewhat ‘standard’ but that a Voyager (RME, or Old School) uses something different?

Moog was good enough to mail me a resistor and pot to replace the fixed resistor so that I can make the two compatible but I wondered about other devices.

Will Foogers work equally well with either or is this a non issue since they are not VCOs per se. What about synth.com modular equipment or DSI or other that might have CV pitch and gate?

I’m relatively new at this so apologies for the ‘dumb’ question. I looked elsewhere on this forum and found some info but nothing conclusive.

Thanks

Voyagers are 1V/oct.
Arrick (Synth.com) are 1V/oct
Some other stuff including some foogers are sort of 1.2V/oct
Still other brands are hz/oct.

The only thing weird is old original Moogs are S-trig instead of V-trig.

I think my Micro is like .93 VPO or something. Don’t quote me on that. Ringmods and Freqboxes need to be attenuated to track with these synths, but Ill bet that Any Fooger will work correctly with modern Moog stuff.

Do you have the Vx351 to go withyour Voyager? This will enable you to control your phatty which would be optimal since its keyboard is broader. Having a Phatty with CV outs is great. The only thing keeping you from playing duophonics is the fact theres no Midi.

Enjoy and let us know how you like it!

Eric