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Best circuitbent machines

Started by voodoolikeudoo, November 18, 2005, 04:36:17 AM

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voodoolikeudoo

Anyone from circuitbenders or anyone who has circuitbending experience, what would you say are the best circuitbent machines?

Circuitbenders

Thats a tricky one to answer as most machines are good at different things but as a rough idea of what would be the best machines for certain sounds:

Coleco Talking Teacher - Organic glitching sounds
Speak & Maths (earlier models) - Dirty noise loops & throbbing glitch loops
Casio SK-1 - Random Sample grinding and alien washes of noise
Yamaha VSS-30 or VSS-200 - Noisy circuitbent sample loops
Roland TR-727 - Best circuitbent 'extra percussion' sounds
Alesis HR-16 - Probably the best all round circuitbent drum machine but the Kawai R-50 comes a close second
i am not paid to listen to this drivel, you are a terminal fool

Fatdave

#2
The lengendary Roland TB303 if you can get your hands on one.  :o
Never put a sock in a toaster

catweazle

Hi there,

I own a TB303 but i never thouht about bending it!!! :'(   
Be aware with analog stuff (transistors are very sensitive for currents - demage!!!)

I found out that CASIO keyboards with are good bendable machines (CT-380, SK-8 etc)

But I am working with Mikrocontrollers (Microchip PIC 18Fxxx) to store sample and bend them via software.

gtz
eric
(from germany, so excuse my english)

Circuitbenders

There are loads of mods on the net for the 303 if you look around a bit. Something as simple as installing an external filter cutoff CV input can be done in about 5 minutes using a minijack socket and a piece of wire.

I agree though, modding something like a 303 can be scary :o
i am not paid to listen to this drivel, you are a terminal fool

Dirt

#5
So far my best experiance is with a 80's tape deck/radio. But I broke one of the main rules if you want to call them that, I bent something that plugs into a wall. anyhow, I get rad sounds out of it like strange pulses, screeches, beeps, static. sadly its very limited. so I want to add some simple boards from childrens toys. I don't suggest playing with things that plugs into a wall unless you know what you are doing or you really don't mind a good shock or even a hospital.

Circuitbenders

personally i love a good 150 volts or so up the arm, theres nothing i like better than lying on the floor twitching for a few minutes unable to speak but no, i wouldn't recommend it at all  :) . When you open up a PC monitor and theres a big sticker saying WARNING 26,000 VOLTS! its time to start worrying  ;)
i am not paid to listen to this drivel, you are a terminal fool