question about the cord used to power the moog source:
this is probably dumb of me, but i assumed those 3 prong cables used for amps, computers, etc were all the same. Am i wrong?
Do they need to ‘match’ the respective gear in a certain way (like wattage/volts etc)? If so, this would explain something
That IEC three-pin power socket is used worldwide. First you need to verify that the unit is wired for your local voltage (should be labeled on the badge with the serial #) and second you need a power cord that mates with the duplex outlets for your country.
no, not xlr. the cord fits my wall socket/moog fine. american cord/power supply etc. but i ask because i’ve used different power cords with my source (like ones from guitar amps and computers) because they are the same ‘type’ of cord, however my source would sometimes do this thing where 2 keys (side by side) would play the same note. i wondered if the voltage wasn’t correct or something, but i thought these cords were basically universal?
i just noticed that on the end of the cord (that came with my moog) it’s: 10A 125V. but so was the cord from an old computer, and amplifier that i used sometimes too. weird.
this is basic filtering i guess. is there a way to have the filter not start-over when i depress a key? or is this a function that the source doesnt do? i want the filter to keep sweeping even when i take my fingers off the keys. seems like it starts over each time i hit a key. any ideas?
ahh, okay. see i started with an MG-1, which doesnt even have a filter EG. so i’m used to an endless sweep… (regardless of letting the keys up) i guess which was controlled by the modulation?
hi again,
so my source questions/woes continue on…
I mentioned this on the forum a while back, but the synth never did it again so i thought it was a random squeak, until recently. the middle F# and G keys were both playing the same note (intermittently).
I think some of you said it was because the synth couldn’t decide which note to go with. I had it it tuned and recalibrated with a strobe tuner by a trustoworthy engineer friend of mine who’s worked a lot on moogs. he said something like: he figured it drifted so far off that one of those notes voltage was now closer to the other than itself (he said that in a lot more complicated way, thats just my dummy version).
anyway, i had him tune it up and recalibrate it and then i used it for a rehearsal set last night. after about it hour it suddenly did the ‘dual-note problem’ again, but NOW it had moved from that middle F# (which is exactly halfway across the keyboard) down 13 keys to share the lower F and F# together. this is very bizarre. any idea (from how far the problem moved) what may be causing an issue like this?
The engineer thought maybe it was inconsistent voltages on the output of the wall plug i was using. but i had this happen in my house as well as the rehersal building. before it would happen upon start-up, but this time it happened after an hour problem free. If i plug it in right now, it’ll probably be fine again. It never acts up when i want to show someone.