ONESHOT Event Generator

Unipolar modulation waveform generator, half LFO, half envelope!

(4 customer reviews)

3.75 ex. VAT

1 - 9€3.75 ex. VAT
10 - 99€3.00 ex. VAT
100+€2.25 ex. VAT

10 in stock (can be backordered)

SKU: ONESHOT Categories: ,

Description

The ONESHOT chip is a One-Shot Event Generator. It creates interesting unipolar modulation waveforms made from a single ”ping”. You can alter the shape and speed of the ping, and also add decaying echos to it, with separate Delay and Repeats controls. This lets you easily generate interesting and unusual one-off modulation waveforms. It makes things that sounds like a ball bouncing on the floor, or a single hit with echoes, or a stick being dragged across a washboard.

As such, it exists somewhere in the area between an envelope generator and an LFO.

Download the Electric Druid ONESHOT Event Generator DatasheetElectric Druid datasheet icon

The datasheet includes the pinout diagram and application circuit.

 

 

Additional information

Weight 0.0005 kg

4 reviews for ONESHOT Event Generator

  1. Christophe (verified owner)

    Hi! Is there a way to replace the wave pot by a rotary switch ? Thanks

  2. Christophe (verified owner)

    Cool! Thanks very much !

  3. Andrew McLoud

    I became a big fan of that chip!
    The final filtering stage in the schematic didn´t went out for me, so i ignored it …
    Now it does the job in my eurorack.

    I´d like to see more of these super easy to use 5V chips!

    • Tom Wiltshire

      The passive filter in the datasheet isn’t buffered in any way, so it won’t feed a low impedance. For some uses an active filter would be better. I should draw a Eurorack schematic for this thing…

      The StompLFO is a similar design (this chip was based on it) and provides eight waveforms including two random waves. Check it out!

  4. Jaga

    That’s pretty interesting chip. Just wondering, if there’s an easy way to use rotary encoder for Repeats CV input? It might be cool to use 36 detent rotary encoder for this.

    • Tom Wiltshire

      It’d be possible, but there’s not “an easy way”. The quadrature output from a rotary encoder is a long way from what the Repeats CV input is expecting, so you’d need some intermediate interface circuit to get from one to the other.
      A pot-with-detents would get you closer more easily, but the chip wasn’t designed with that in mind and the Repeats CV response isn’t fully linear (it’s linear at the low end to allow you to select a specific number of repeats, but above about 16 or so, it becomes curved to increase the range, at the cost of making it harder to select a specific number). Anyway, I’ve never seen a 36-detent pot! The only commonly available ones are 11-detent. I once asked Alpha Taiwan about an 8-detent version, and they told me it probably wasn’t worth the tooling fee unless I needed 50K units a year or so! So it could be done, but you’ll need to buy a few…

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