Quote:
Originally Posted by Timo
Yes. Imagine the Osc Shape knob as a mixer. That's all it does. It blends between PCM <> Sawtooth <> Pulse waveshapes.
At an Osc Shape value of 0, you have 100% PCM waveform, and nothing else. The PCM waveform itself is determined with the "WaveSel/PW" knob.
With an Osc Shape of 0 > 63 you are fading the PCM waveform out, and the sawtooth in. An Osc Shape value of 64 (middle) would be 100% sawtooth and nothing else.
From 64 > 127 you are fading the sawtooth out and the pulse waveform in. At 127 you will have 100% pulse and nothing else.
So an Osc Shape value of 32 (a quarter) for example would be blending 50% PCM wave with 50% sawtooth.
Or, an Osc Shape value of 95 (three quarters) you would be blending 50% sawtooth with 50% pulse.
[Incidently, you can never blend PCM with Pulse unless you bring a second oscillator into play.]
Yes. In these instances, the "WaveSel/PW" knob determines the pulse width of the pulse waveform itself (before it's blended with the sawtooth).
If the Osc Shape knob is between 0 and 63, the WaveSel/PW will state the PCM waveform used for blending with the sawtooth.
You can change the PCM waveform using the WaveSel/PW knob at any time while the Osc Shape knob remains between 0-63.
When the Osc Shape knob exceeds 64, the PCM waveform is no longer needed as it becomes inaudible... The Osc Shape knob starts to blend the pulse waveform instead, so the WaveSel/PW knob switches to "pulse-width" mode to control the pulse element.
Let's start afresh. Ignore the sawtooth by setting Osc Shape to a value of 127. You will hear 100% pulse waveform and nothing else. Use the WaveSel/PW knob to directly control the pulse width of this pulse waveform...
... Now simply use the Osc Shape value to blend the sawtooth back in (if desired). If you don't want any sawtooth, keep Osc Shape at 127.
The WaveSel/PW knob will never affect the sawtooth waveform. The sawtooth is always static. The WaveSel/PW knob only affects the PCM wave, OR the pulse width of the pulse, depending on which range the Osc Shape value lies (0-63, or 64-127).
And the Osc Shape knob is nothing more than a mixer.
HTH
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Thanks again, Timo. So, basically, you can get 2 waves out of each of the oscillators at any given time? That would basically make the Virus C an eight oscillator synth at any given time (including the suboscillator and the noise oscillator). Also, I realize that I was asking the question entirely incorrectly. What I meant originally was "What are the functions of the Oscillator-1 Wave and Oscillator-2 Wave menu options in the Oscillator EDIT Menu?" Under the paragraph describing Oscillator-1 Wave, the manual states: "Selects among of 64 spectral waveshapes. This parameter is identical to WAVE SEL/PW (see appropriate section) when SHAPE (see appropriate section) is set to the left half of its control range. However, in contrast to WAVE SEL/PW, WAVE is always available regardless of the current SHAPE setting." The last sentence is what I'm not entirely clear about. What use is it to have "WAVE" always available when, let's say, I've already passed +64 and am now mixing a pulse and saw waves? Let me say once again, though, NO WHERE IN THE MANUAL does it teach any of the stuff that you have revealed to me in this post. Honestly, maybe it does, but in it's own cryptic way that I couldn't understand.