Hi all,
I have been wondering about this for a while. It seems that most CV inputs on Moog gear (aside from the Voyager?) respond to a unipolar signal of 0-5V; however, the CV outputs are in general bipolar. I understand that sending a 0-10V signal to a 0-5V input would be a bad idea, but what about sending a +/-2.5V LFO signal, for example (or even a +/-5V signal, like an oscillator from the Mother-32 into the MF-101 or Sub 37 filter cutoff)? Will the negative voltage cause harm? I usually just use an attenuator, and make adjustments until I get the sound I want. But should I theoretically always be using offset as well whenever sending bipolar CV to a unipolar input? I am not using any CV from non-Moog gear, so I assume they are generally designed to interact with each other without causing damage? I only have one CP-251, so it would be very limiting to have to use its mixer any time I want to send a CV signal...
Moog unipolar vs bipolar CV
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Re: Moog unipolar vs bipolar CV
Always check the manuals to get proper CV ranges. But in general negative CV is no problem. Normally knobs on MFs will act as an offset when a CV is plugged in, so a bipolar LFO (most MF LFOs are bipolar IIRC) will sweep above and below this setting.
From memory, I think you can apply a negative offset (to -5V?) to the Freqbox's freq setting and it will put the oscillator into LFO mode.
From memory, I think you can apply a negative offset (to -5V?) to the Freqbox's freq setting and it will put the oscillator into LFO mode.