Designing a sample & hold-circuit from scratch

Ғылым және технология

Support the channel...
... through Patreon: www.patreon.com/moritzklein
... by buying my DIY kits: www.ericasynths.lv/shop/diy-kits-1/
Working simulation on falstad: tinyurl.com/y2zftuq2
BJT version: tinyurl.com/yxaqk8ag
In this episode, we'll design a super simple JFET-based DIY sample & hold-circuit. Because I've only ever used BJTs before, the video also doubles as a deep dive into JFET basics. If you want to follow along (which I strongly recommend), here's a bill of materials:
1x TL074 quad op-amp
1x J113 (or J112/J111) n-channel JFET
2x 1N4148 diode
1x 100k linear mono potentiometer
1x 1M resistor
3x 100k resistor
1x 33k resistor
1x 1k resistor
1x 100 nF film capacitor
1x 1nF film capacitor
Chapters
00:00 Intro & Sound Demo
01:32 Sample & Hold Basics
06:15 JFET Deep Dive
12:00 Sampling Accurately
16:47 Core Circuit Setup
23:39 Trigger Trouble
28:48 Final Version & Outro

Пікірлер: 139

  • @jonny__b
    @jonny__b2 жыл бұрын

    I don't really care about synth design, but you are a truly gifted electronics teacher. Your explanations are clear and concise, and you make subjects which can often be subjected to overcomplication incredibly simple. Bravo sir! Subscribed

  • @TheLightningStalker
    @TheLightningStalker2 жыл бұрын

    6:15 this is the best basic description of JFET operation I have seen yet.

  • @Chris-vr8cd
    @Chris-vr8cd2 жыл бұрын

    Please never stop making these videos

  • @hasemhasan1151
    @hasemhasan11512 жыл бұрын

    Such a well designed video. You explained everything in such a simple way. Definitely subscribed for more videos like these.

  • @McTroyd
    @McTroyd2 жыл бұрын

    That's about the best break down of the "equivalent series resistance" and "self-discharge" topics I've seen on KZread. I think the application, in this case your synth, really helps illustrate the concept well -- with your 'scope, we can both see and hear the result. Good stuff. 👍️

  • @carloschafin9144
    @carloschafin9144 Жыл бұрын

    Great content and I personally appreciate the context of synth-eurorack based designs. Thanks so much and please keep up the great videos. You're explanations are very educational.

  • @SBender36
    @SBender362 жыл бұрын

    Another very educative vid, excellent ! thx for all 😀

  • @ro-ce8vg
    @ro-ce8vg2 жыл бұрын

    fantastic video, the timing for me seeing this is perfect as ive just finished my first electronics course, so i actually understand what youre talking about

  • @markblacket8900
    @markblacket8900 Жыл бұрын

    great video, thank you! also loved the hand gesture for "destroying a component" :D

  • @izerpizer
    @izerpizer Жыл бұрын

    Outstanding video! Extremely well made!

  • @madrigo
    @madrigo2 жыл бұрын

    I was going to make a video on the topic then I got your notification. Holy hell this video was good! hahaha Now I'll just reference to yours and show de differences, I'm not making it better than this. Thanks for the content Moritz!

  • @sennabullet

    @sennabullet

    2 жыл бұрын

    First, immaculate diagrams...which significantly enhance (second) the excellent explanation. Leaning should always be this good. Thank you as always for sharing your knowledge.

  • @MeeBilt
    @MeeBilt2 жыл бұрын

    Excellent video as always!

  • @Mogwai06
    @Mogwai062 жыл бұрын

    you done did it again, brutha! you made about the clearest and best explained video step by step of the very thing i've been working on at the moment. i entirely appreciate the shit out of you, dude. these videos are great at explaining the shit between the lines so top speak, that is either absent most other places, or just explained way above the heads of anyone not formally educated in these matters. you're a fucking saint. thank you thank you thank you!

  • @zacharyrowden7692
    @zacharyrowden76922 жыл бұрын

    Another enlightening, beautiful video. Thanks!

  • @MrFlint51
    @MrFlint512 жыл бұрын

    Many years ago I built my S&H module using a CMOS 4007 chip configured as a SPDT switch. The low resistance gave very snappy sampling. I also used an identical circuit as keyboard voltage hold so that I could have portamento and piano-style sustain pedal

  • @AjinkyaMahajan
    @AjinkyaMahajan2 жыл бұрын

    Impressive demonstration. Cheers ✨✨

  • @danielmendes5682
    @danielmendes56822 жыл бұрын

    great video as always! thank you Moritz :)

  • @blenderbuch
    @blenderbuch2 жыл бұрын

    Great as usual!

  • @DoctorKarul
    @DoctorKarul2 жыл бұрын

    Your explanations are wonderful. I just finished building my S&H and the debugging would have been better if your video was 1 week earlier! Something you didn't mention: if the input gets near the negative rail, the voltage between gate and source is too low, and it begins sampling. This behavior of JFET is confusing for newbies.

  • @Mogwai06

    @Mogwai06

    2 жыл бұрын

    yes it is! im glad it wasnt just me. thanks for that info too by the way...

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    you‘re right - i should have mentioned that the circuit is designed for a eurorack-standard 5 V peak-to-peak signal. my bad!

  • @briannielson971
    @briannielson9712 жыл бұрын

    So informative! this is awesome!!

  • @tanjiro3285
    @tanjiro32852 жыл бұрын

    I am sensing ur channel is gonna Rock🔥

  • @mattihaaponiemi4480
    @mattihaaponiemi44802 жыл бұрын

    I just yesterday started to figure out what would be my dream s&h module. It would have 2 channels, accuracy to sample pitch without quantizing, slew pots with range from musical portamento to looong rises and fall times, pre-patched noise in, internal clock, switches to select between s&h and t&h. Maybe that's it. I'm happy to hear dreams from other people too.

  • @riechner

    @riechner

    2 жыл бұрын

    Maybe some Rectification and an inverted Out?

  • @Mogwai06

    @Mogwai06

    2 жыл бұрын

    yours sounds almost what ive been trying to build recently. i want to be able to tune it somehow to get arpeggios out of simple waveforms. so im guessing an internal clock is a good idea but not sure if itd be necessarily mandatory. my thinking was that the frequency of the sampled wave would need to be a multiple of factor of the trigger rate, so that itd be a repeatable pattern rather than just random always. again though, im teaching myself all this shit so i could be far off base also... maybe as long as the cloak was sync-able to the waveform's...?

  • @hadihammouda2704

    @hadihammouda2704

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'd suggest having a look at the LF398 IC, it's a relatively cheap monolithic sample-and-hold circuit - I believe that's what was used in the original Wogglebug and there's a great take on it by René Schmitz which you can find on his webpage! I've built a couple modules from it and with a bit of tweaking you can get it to sample waveforms as "microtonal" scales, anyway it's a good building block for any kind of random-voltage based circuits! Strongly recommend

  • @Marioasmr929

    @Marioasmr929

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Mogwai06 xcxccx cc

  • @torronthemighty
    @torronthemighty2 жыл бұрын

    I love all of these diy video! A little over my head and the drawings and explanations have me lost but I really want to give this a shot!

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    i‘d recommend you start with my VCO series - those videos are more beginner friendly!

  • @sonosus
    @sonosus2 жыл бұрын

    'real things are never ideal' - as a mechanical engineer, this statement has never been more true.

  • @Mogwai06

    @Mogwai06

    2 жыл бұрын

    as a human, i think it really applies to everything honestly...

  • @christianlamalle8758
    @christianlamalle8758 Жыл бұрын

    Very good work and explanations !

  • @gerardstrik2555
    @gerardstrik255510 ай бұрын

    A nice addition would be an offset which can be controlled with a potentiometer. Then, when lowering the range of sampled voltages, you can choose a higher pitch instead of having only the low pitch ones.

  • @SwampSurfer69
    @SwampSurfer692 жыл бұрын

    Looks like I at least have all the parts... I should probably do this then. Maybe I'll actually learn some JFET Basics too, as an added bonus! Thanks, Moritz👍🏽

  • @techslfink9722
    @techslfink97222 жыл бұрын

    Thanks! Just the schematic I was looking for!

  • @saimon1680
    @saimon16802 жыл бұрын

    Nice work!

  • @kensmith5694
    @kensmith569410 ай бұрын

    I will explain two concepts that someone wanting to build systems related to thing may find useful: 1) Imagine a typical inverting amplifier with a capacitor across the feedback to limit the bandwidth. For the moment consider the resistors still being connected to each other but not directly to the inverting input of the op-amp. The capacitor is connected directly. The resistors go through a switch (JFET) to get to the inverting input. With the switch "ON", the circuit works as normal. With the switch off, the output of the opamp is fixing in voltage. This makes and inverting sample and hold circuit. To make it work well, you really need a second JFET to ground the junction of the two resistors while you are holding so that the voltage across the first JFET is always small. 2) Given this inverting sample and hold, there is a slightly clever thing you can do with it. Imagine that the "sampling" time made so short that the output doesn't get all the way to the final value before you go into "hold". Also imagine that the sample/hold cycle repeats fairly fast. Instead of running the sample and hold circuit directly from the input, it could be run from another opamp that is adding the input signal (remember the circuit inverts) and the output signal and filtering that before sending it to the sample and hold. With care, you can make a circuit that makes an output that sort of "draws a smooth curve connecting the dots of when the sample signal is true". The circuit will tend not to make strong beats between the sample signal and the input signal.

  • @TheNormalUniverse
    @TheNormalUniverse2 жыл бұрын

    oh happy day! Love your vids

  • @RegebroRepairs
    @RegebroRepairs2 жыл бұрын

    Ooooh, yes. I love sample and hold.

  • @alexmcgruder6154
    @alexmcgruder61542 жыл бұрын

    I've just dicsovered your channel, and your videos are incredible! Thank you so much!

  • @possible-realities
    @possible-realities2 жыл бұрын

    Nice! But I think that the sampling pulse is too short. When you turned down the trigger frequency, you could see that the amplitude decreases as well, which means that there is not enough time to sample the the input during one pulse. One way to solve this problem would be to mimic the design of the master-slave D flip-flop: You have two sample and hold circuits in series. The first samples when the trigger is low, the second when it's high. Then when the trigger goes from low to high, the first sample and hold starts to hold and the second one starts to sample it, and that is when the new value comes through. Probably needs a few more components, but should give plenty of time to sample the signal (as long as the trigger isn't just made of narrow pulses).

  • @bibel2k
    @bibel2k2 жыл бұрын

    Amazing! Thank you

  • @anshuksahu9207
    @anshuksahu92072 жыл бұрын

    New epic video, yay

  • @uPek450HL
    @uPek450HL2 жыл бұрын

    Very good !!

  • @rainbowmade1880
    @rainbowmade188010 ай бұрын

    From one Klein to another, well done!!!

  • @kurtkabica
    @kurtkabica2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Moritz…😻

  • @ewajustka
    @ewajustka2 жыл бұрын

    so good. thank you

  • @colonelbarker
    @colonelbarker2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for being so clear and building the circuit up piece by piece. Out if curiosity how does it sound with a human voice driving the input?

  • @owensthethird
    @owensthethird2 жыл бұрын

    Honestly sounds a lot like a Buckethead solo when you feed white noise through the vco.

  • @Abihef
    @Abihef2 жыл бұрын

    Love the carpet And as I said on fb, perfect timing

  • @Scrogan
    @Scrogan2 жыл бұрын

    Surprisingly simple for such a usable result. Considering how flat your output voltage was I bet you could have used a 10nF without issue. Split the difference and size a cap for the multiplicative average between the on-resistance and the off-resistance. I’d also consider an analog switch IC, as they can have much lower on resistances since they use an internal MOSFET instead of a JFET, and can be used in bipolar circuits due to connecting the body to the negative rail instead of the source. I figured that JFETs would always be far inferior to analog switches because of this, but considering a JFET’s very low leakage they’re actually decent. Don’t use a CD4053 though, they’re pretty bad. I think you can reduce the leakage problem further by using an op-amp feeding a signal to before the switch/transistor, think I saw it on EEVblog. Personally I was designing a sample+hold circuit to be used in some sort of convoluted phase comparator inside an audio phase-locked-loop.

  • @bph9727

    @bph9727

    Жыл бұрын

    Will DG409DY be OK?

  • @robotdogmusic
    @robotdogmusic2 жыл бұрын

    Great video Moritz! I'm not sure what to suggest next, but very much looking forward to the book. Also, can't tell if that's a PCB accident or a cat attack, stay safe!

  • @peter.stimpel
    @peter.stimpel2 жыл бұрын

    A video, and such a great topic ... kinda like xmas is nearby ;) Cheers

  • @AJMansfield1
    @AJMansfield12 жыл бұрын

    This is way simpler than the idea I had for how to approach this. My concept was to add transistors to gate the Vs+ and Vs- pins of an op-amp, or use an op-amp with a shutdown or device-enable pin. When sampling the op-amp would be able to pump charge in and out of the capacitor to match the input, then when holding I'd cut the supplies so it can't pump any further. (Would probably need to use a FET-input amplifier to ensure we don't leak current in the switched-off state.)

  • @inlasttonowhere4459
    @inlasttonowhere44592 жыл бұрын

    Very Nice, thank you 😃✌⭐

  • @toifel
    @toifel2 жыл бұрын

    Using a quantizer with an S&H is a pretty common use case for me.. just to sample every (n)th note of a sequence for a baseline. Still lots of useful information, thanks for sharing.

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    fair point - will see if i can get it to work with enough precision in the follow-up!

  • @Mogwai06

    @Mogwai06

    2 жыл бұрын

    thats what i usually do to come up with a random pattern, but i sample a vco's (or something similar usually) output wave and even then sometimes i try to time it up to get a repeatable pattern or arpeggio. the sampled-and-held signal goes via a quantizer into the v/oct of another/second vco.

  • @Mogwai06

    @Mogwai06

    2 жыл бұрын

    edit: i meant i sampled an LFO. i think i was having issue with variations on the output, or lack thereof, due to the vco output's inherent speed...

  • @markhammer643
    @markhammer6432 жыл бұрын

    While working on a sample & hold filter unit for guitar, it occurred to me that one could, theoretically, vary the stability/perfection of the circuit's ability to hang on to a sampled noise voltage. So, I experimented with what I like to call the "droop" option. That is, a held voltage in the storage cap that is allowed to drain off before the next clock cycle, in a manner that is musically useful. The drain-off time is set by a resistance to ground in parallel with the storage cap - like any decay-time resistance in an envelope follower - but requires change contingent on the step-clocking rate. I.E., if the time between samples is very short, the drain-off time needs to be faster in order to be audible. It adds a musically interesting wrinkle to S&H effects, whether they are applied to filters, VCOs, or whatever. One can think of it as a sort of unidirectional (downward only) portamento. I'm sure those cleverer than I can mimic this with slewing modules that can add glide between steps, but this is a LOT simpler and easier. I use an on-off-on SPDT toggle and two selected resistors to provide faster and slower droop and no-droop. Hard to get simpler.

  • @chrisjones-fp5vd
    @chrisjones-fp5vd2 жыл бұрын

    That was awesome. I've done this with the CD4046 but it was nowhere near as cool. Def wanna build this

  • @alexwalli
    @alexwalli2 жыл бұрын

    Great video! Even though I disagree on the precision part. One of the main s&h use cases for me is holding a pitch cv using the gate that triggers a note when pitch and rhythm come from different sources. (As mylarmelodies does in his s&h vid around the 15min mark). Maybe that‘s something for a follow up? :)

  • @finonomastropiero4261
    @finonomastropiero42612 жыл бұрын

    Nice banger

  • @MaZderMind
    @MaZderMind2 жыл бұрын

    Vers nice drawings 👏

  • @d.j.peters
    @d.j.peters2 жыл бұрын

    What are about IC's as analog switches 74HC/HCT4051, CD74HC/HCT4316 or any analog multiplexers etc ?

  • @colossusaudio5126
    @colossusaudio51262 жыл бұрын

    hello, is any N channel symm would work? like the 2N5458 ? thanks

  • @jlucasound
    @jlucasound10 ай бұрын

    SNL's "Sprockets"!!! 😆😂😉

  • @possible-realities
    @possible-realities2 жыл бұрын

    Any reason to use a JFET instead of a MOSFET? With a MOSFET, you don't need to worry about the gate voltage going above the source voltage.

  • @observant_sound
    @observant_sound2 жыл бұрын

    at 04:00 why does the 2nd part of the circuit hold the voltage once the switch is off? Wouldn't going to ground be the path of least resistance?

  • @johnwellbelove148
    @johnwellbelove148 Жыл бұрын

    An alternative to using a JFET could be use a diode bridge and drive the top and bottom diode pairs with complementary positive and negative pulses.

  • @josephcote6120
    @josephcote61202 жыл бұрын

    The only thing I would add is an op amp buffer before the 100k pot. This will give the circuit a very high impedance (tens to hundreds of megohms) vs 100k input impedance. And no harm to buffer the trigger input as well.

  • @mardav1545
    @mardav15452 жыл бұрын

    I would like to know from where you obtain those capacitors and breadboards?

  • @denebvegaaltair1146
    @denebvegaaltair11462 жыл бұрын

    I have never worked with JFETs. Will this still work if I use a mosfet instead?

  • @stephenlife686
    @stephenlife686 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Moritz, I wonder if you could help. I’ve built this on a breadboard and double checked everything many times that it is as you have explained, but all I get is the noise from the white noise generator and nothing through the trigger input. And the pot is just adjusting the volume. I’m sure I’ve built it correctly but I can’t work out what’s wrong. Any help would be most appreciated. Thank you 🙏

  • @cj-er4xr
    @cj-er4xr2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks great video as always. What component change/add would a track & hold circuit need?

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    as far as i know, the only difference between t&h and s&h is the duration of the sampling phase. so you could simply install a switch at the trigger input that bypasses the capacitor and diode. this way, the circuit will be tracking while the trigger in is high, and would hold when it goes low.

  • @cj-er4xr

    @cj-er4xr

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@MoritzKlein0 thank you so much I'll try that!

  • @matheuspimenta8486

    @matheuspimenta8486

    2 жыл бұрын

    the circuit without all the pulse control shenanigans is already a track and hold. The slopes he describes as ''bad triggers'' are tracking the triangle waveform and then holding.

  • @andrewmackenzie2638
    @andrewmackenzie263810 ай бұрын

    Just a thought - could you not put 2 JFETs in parallel to double the current for charging the cap?

  • @chefbeats5314
    @chefbeats53142 жыл бұрын

    Hey Moritz, thank you so much for these videos they’re amazing! I just wanted to ask what your design process is for all these circuit videos? Do you have a background in electronic engineering?

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    no, i‘m self-taught, i‘m a humanities major. doing circuit design started off as a small hobby and grew from there. at some point i realized that explaining this stuff to someone is helping me learn much better, so i started this channel!

  • @keithking1985
    @keithking19852 жыл бұрын

    that was very well explained dude.. thank you.. i will put this video into the old grey matter... BUT ALSO! into my favourites.( for when the brain refuses to work for me ; ) .. ) P.S. and a screen picture of your final schematic for my ever growing circuit's file. : )

  • @AntonioBonifacio
    @AntonioBonifacio2 жыл бұрын

    Lovely! Next time a quantizer? :3

  • @PracticalCat
    @PracticalCat Жыл бұрын

    Just curious. How are you turning off the jfet without a negative voltage? Isnt that trigger pulse going from 0v to +ve voltage? I thought the jfet will only block with its gate voltage lower than the source voltage. Ie -ve. What am I missing? I can get the fet to turn off by negatively biasing the gate to the -ve rail so the +ve spikes bring it up to 0v (source on the other side of the diode) to sample than back down to -ve to hold.

  • @mramonlopez

    @mramonlopez

    Жыл бұрын

    I have exactly that problem. I tried to build the circuit this weekend and it doesn't work for me. It seems that the comparator output only swings between 0V and +12V. I need to do more testing to eliminate the possibility that the sound card I'm using as an oscilloscope isn't filtering out the DC component.

  • @professionalhater2809
    @professionalhater28092 жыл бұрын

    I’m new to this, are your feeding the circuit audio or voltage? Can this work with any type of sound source?

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    yes, you can use any kind of sound source for this. i'd recommend you watch my beginner's guide to breadboarding (kzread.info/dash/bejne/iqSBvNGLY8nNlJM.html)

  • @Galova
    @Galova2 жыл бұрын

    for some reason I like seeing things on analog oscilloscope a lot more. yet newer digital oscilloscopes are so advanced and convenient they lack much style in it. They're fancy but don't look cool

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    agreed!

  • @pontussjoblom2164
    @pontussjoblom2164 Жыл бұрын

    How will this work with an audiorate clock? Looking to build one to use as a samplerate reduction effect.

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    Жыл бұрын

    i demonstrate that in this video: kzread.info/dash/bejne/kaqmxZaql6XXkqQ.html

  • @finonomastropiero4261
    @finonomastropiero42612 жыл бұрын

    I dont get it, which signal is being sampled from the osom banger of the beginning? The deepmind 12 chords Triggered by the tr8's clock?

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    no, it’s a white noise source for the signal input, and 16th note triggers from the tr-8!

  • @NamelessSmile
    @NamelessSmile2 жыл бұрын

    Hi! Why not use an analog switch IC?

  • @DollysplitBand
    @DollysplitBand2 жыл бұрын

    You always upload videos on concepts I'm currently learning about, and I love it. I've been going deep into track and holds for the purpose of VpO bus bar keyboard designs. Have you any experience with the LF398 ic?

  • @DrJ3RK8

    @DrJ3RK8

    Жыл бұрын

    I've used the LF398 quite a bit. One can build an extremely simple S&H with it, but I've noticed that it droops a bit more than I like. I prefer to use a DG-series switch (such as DG418), use a Polypropylene capacitor, a good op amp that can drive capacitive loads, and a low drift output op amp like the OPA140. This combination works REALLY well.

  • @DollysplitBand

    @DollysplitBand

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DrJ3RK8 I really appreciate the detailed responce, thank you. I'd never heard of that series of chips, that'll save me many wasted switches. As a little bit of a capacitor noob, I've read the most reliable for this are polypropylene film, which checks out with what you are saying here. Would wima, small plastic box types be suitable? Or should i be looking at other packages? Thanks again

  • @DrJ3RK8

    @DrJ3RK8

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DollysplitBand I use the WIMA red-box polypropylene caps a lot. I use them for VCO integrators, filter integrators, S&H, etc. I use TDK MLCC (small blue) caps for everything else.

  • @fintux
    @fintux2 жыл бұрын

    Nice video once again! Just a small comment: the audio level from the synth at the end was quite low, especially when using headphones.

  • @RedRacconKing
    @RedRacconKing2 жыл бұрын

    Why did you not use an opamp?

  • @EarJuice
    @EarJuice Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I was kinda thinking don't all typical sample n hold modules have droop?

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah. you’d have to go digital to eliminate it.

  • @kensmith5694

    @kensmith5694

    10 ай бұрын

    @@MoritzKlein0 Not quite. There are "droop compensation" circuits that tend to make the hold voltage run away to the rails instead of actually drooping. In theory they can be fine tuned so they don't do either. In practice, not so much.

  • @dragonemortale9056
    @dragonemortale90562 жыл бұрын

    hi, great video, how if it was made with an asymmetrical jfet?

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    then your capacitor would charge and discharge at different speeds i think, which would reduce the circuit‘s accuracy further

  • @dragonemortale9056

    @dragonemortale9056

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@MoritzKlein0 thanks, maybe could make it even spicier

  • @tamasgal_com
    @tamasgal_com2 жыл бұрын

    Nice video as always, but what happened to your hand? 😅

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    kitchen appliances can be fierce!

  • @tanjiro3285
    @tanjiro32852 жыл бұрын

    you have got a nice Indian style carpet 🙂

  • @zerstaerker
    @zerstaerker Жыл бұрын

    If you can't find a JFET for the switching part, the beloved cmos 4016 IC can do this.

  • @mastermachetier5594
    @mastermachetier55942 жыл бұрын

    I want to design a sample and hold that takes a clock and can sample on divisions of that clock with like 6 outputs with 6 different divisions

  • @Gary-vo9rm
    @Gary-vo9rm2 жыл бұрын

    Right on. I'm new to this channel and this electricity bullshit :-) . This video has revealed much to me. Thanks! As a matter of fact, I'm right in the middle of something I believe you just answered for me. Beeeuuuteeeful!!

  • @roboticsadvancedstudy9512
    @roboticsadvancedstudy9512 Жыл бұрын

    Looking good computer hardware circut explanation tutorials..... And nural stick circut tutorials.....

  • @darrenjefferies2598
    @darrenjefferies259816 күн бұрын

    The J113 mosfets seem to be fairly expensive so I'm wondering whether anyone has substituted it with a Mosfet or CMOS switch gate. If anyone has done this successfully, could they please let me know the substitute part they used? I'm not sure about Mosfets as they have an internal diode as I understand it but I have not worked with mosfets much and there have been a few mentions in other comments that a mosfet may be suitable. BTW, I have just started learning about modular synths and have found that this channel is the best source of information, Well done Moritz, your explanations are brilliant.

  • @soejrd24978
    @soejrd249782 жыл бұрын

    Smallest white noise circuit?

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    soon!

  • @johanekamp
    @johanekamp2 жыл бұрын

    Hi Moritz! Ii find it also faszinating what you are doing. May I ask if you learned it in some way, do you have a Ausbildung, or is it learning all that stuff by diy?

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    it‘s all learning by doing for me - just bought my first batch of components one day and discovered that figuring this stuff out is super fun.

  • @johanekamp

    @johanekamp

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@MoritzKlein0 Yes I get that! One day I bought an Arduino and then i was somehow hooked with electronics and also bought more stuff. Now what's frustrating for me somehow is the steep learning curve paired with everyday business stealing me time for what i am curious about. But now i have some parts the will be some time to go on...

  • @tylergunther8219
    @tylergunther82192 жыл бұрын

    Can you do a video on midi to CV

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    2 жыл бұрын

    i‘ll try and see if it can be done without a microcontroller!

  • @AlPha-lv8ok
    @AlPha-lv8ok2 жыл бұрын

    👍

  • @azador2677
    @azador26772 жыл бұрын

    ily

  • @stephenlife5196
    @stephenlife51968 ай бұрын

    I’ve tried building this so many times and it just won’t work☹️

  • @gilsoncarlos8706
    @gilsoncarlos87062 жыл бұрын

    Video top parabéns pena estar em inglês

  • @kellerdev2905
    @kellerdev29052 жыл бұрын

    So sample and hold is basically like a ranom number generator that is triggered on demand

  • @matheuspimenta8486
    @matheuspimenta84862 жыл бұрын

    technically it is a track and hold

  • @drstrangelove09
    @drstrangelove092 жыл бұрын

    Good explanation for most of it but at times I did not follow.

  • @kuro758
    @kuro758 Жыл бұрын

    is that a cat's doing on your hand??

  • @MoritzKlein0

    @MoritzKlein0

    Жыл бұрын

    nah, i was trying to clean my new milk jug. didn’t go the way i planned.

  • @scottlarson1548
    @scottlarson15482 жыл бұрын

    One day it dawned on me that every analog synthesizer has a sample and hold circuit because how else would the oscillator know what frequency to keep playing after you release the key?

  • @user-sn6dg5uf4m
    @user-sn6dg5uf4m2 жыл бұрын

    super mario