Famine 1500 starving IFM modules
The previous post details the Flight of Harmony Famine 1500 build. Here it is, controlling all of my Ieaskul F. Mobenthey modules by Peter Blasser. For this patch I used … Read More
The previous post details the Flight of Harmony Famine 1500 build. Here it is, controlling all of my Ieaskul F. Mobenthey modules by Peter Blasser. For this patch I used … Read More
Flight of Harmony Famine 1500 is a voltage-controllable power starvation module. Famine restricts the amount of power sent to modules, starving them, causing erratic behavior. In Feed mode the module … Read More
I am always looking for interesting DIY modules. This is Gaeto from AtoVproject. The module name is derived from Gate + Legato. Multiple Gateos can be chained, and I built … Read More
Music Thing Modular Turing Machine can do a lot more with expanders. The most popular is probably Pulses. Pulses The earlier version of Pulses had seven outputs, but Pulses II … Read More
Long story short, it’s a random looping sequencer. For a full description of the Turing Machine and its expanders, go to Music Thing Modular. The MkII version was introduced in … Read More
Zlob Modular graciously sent me schematics for the VC F3DB. I can’t share them here. Zlob schematics are available directly from Zlob, if you ask. One reason I wanted them … Read More
Another DIY build! God’s Box Loose Fruit dual wave shaper and crossfader. Loose fruit is digitally controlled with a fully analog signal path. It features two separate and similar wave … Read More
I built a DIY-only 4ms Company Noise Swash module, bought from Thonk. It’s a pretty old module that has gone through several design iterations. This is the last iteration, August, … Read More
I am on a DIY roll! Built this nonlinearcircuits Primal Hyperchaos in less than a day. This was my second NLC chaos module. I’m getting used to doing SMD soldering. … Read More
I’m on a DIY streak! This is Monotropa v3 from Reverse Landfill. It is a 4-band fixed filter designed for distortion and feedback. There’s a knob for the strength of … Read More