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Geez, I'll have to run all this by someone smarter than me...perhaps the fellow who helped me build my aforementioned toy-based FX box. But even though I'm no tech guru, your ideas intrigue me! > [Original Message] > From: Bill Fox <billyfox@soundscapes.us> > To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> > Date: 1/29/2005 2:34:17 PM > Subject: Re: emulating a cheap sampling toy > > mungenast@earthlink.net wrote: > > > Howdy, Noisemakers! > > The other day my daughter was recording herself (and snippets of TV > > audio) with her little lo-res hand-held sampling toy, which allows her > > to record about 4 seconds of whatever the built-in mic can pick up and > > then play it back in charmingly mangled low fidelity. Part of this > > must be the low resolution of the toy-grade digital circuitry, and a > > some of it may be from the 2-inch speaker (and the not-exactly-Class-A > > amplifier circuit). > > The question is this: > > Is there anything on the market that can cop the sound of a toy > > sampler? Anything that can sonically degrade our instruments in a > > similar way? It's an entertaining texture and I am beginning to hunger > > for it (bwa-ha-ha-ha-hahaaa!!) > > ~Tim Mungenast > > www.cdbaby.com/mungenast > > www.mungenast.com > > Build a one or two bit ADC and feed it into a home built DAC of the same > bit depth. A few resistors, comparators, simple logic gates, batteries, > micsellaneous stuff is all it should take. > > What would happen if you set a VCO to 20kHz (or more), and pulse width > modulated it with your audio signal? > > Cheers, > > Bill >