First post... hi guys.
After only 2 weeks with the Moog One (actually my second Moog One, because the first unit was faulty), and after finding a bug almost each day, I would say the SNR (signal to noise ratio) is very okay for such an instrument.
I measured both units (the faulty and the new one) with dozens of different tasks in mind, but I couldn't see any issues with noise from the circuits unless some special synth FX are used (=digital domain, which doesn't matter).
Stumbling over this thread I looked at samples from both units, which have been recorded with 192kHz/24bits on a RME ADI8-QS over symmetrical lines. The Moog One internal Noise Reduction is turned off, because I wouldn't trust it no way.
Findings:
With an INIT patch, no FX but all 16 voices active, VCA 100% level and output at 12 o'clock, I get a 72dB SNR with both units. This is okay for a modern analog, and brilliant for a vintage analog.
I think there are a lot of things to complain with the ONE, but the noise level is none of them. Keep in mind that the SNR alone is not telling you much about "noise". The term "noise" is not very clear, it might be white or pink or red or brown; and if you are not a 10-20 years old guy, your ear will turn the white noise into a pink one slowly, but for sure. Year for year.
This being said, if we consider noise to be something spread over the whole spectrum, but the Moog One outputs more energy in a range between 1-80 HZ (which I see here), the
disturbing SNR is even lower. So, don't sweat it.
I have just a very few vintage synths left in my arsenal (OB-Xa, DX7, MiniMoog, Jupiter-8 and that's it) because I am tired of all the maintenance AND ... noise! Rest assured that my old friends have far more noise than your Moog One. Especially the DX7 is a nightmare with about 50dB SNR which is almost 4 times as much "noise" as the Moog One... but a lot of top chart hits have been made using it
