This is another "no priority" suggestion for a future improvement. I find myself now often adding an extra Pulverisateur to a bass sound, doubling the melody with a sine wave two octaves below to give it more "weight". Sometimes you can just use one of its three oscillators for this. But others, when you have a detuned and/or "5th. added", thick sound, you run out of oscillators. It would be great if one of the three oscillators had a "Sub" switch, which would engage a sine wave. I also understand now why so many synths offer this. One could select how many octaves below the incoming note the sine wave would be, and its volume.
Comments (3)
"The Pulverisateur will not get any new features beside better sound quality." Why not? Do you plan to eventually have two coexisting "analogue" synths with different features instead of replacing the Pulverisateur with a better version, like a "Next Pulverisateur"?
yeah i would love that
OK, I understand that. I just felt that my suggestions still fell within the repertoire of functions that could be expected from a typical "analogue" synth and would fit within what is already available (sub-oscillator for an existing oscillator and different routing, or an internal LFO, for the PWM). I would imagine that two co-existing "analogue" synths would have much bigger differences in design than that, like a "monophonic" specialised synth with very raw, powerful sounding oscillators and lots of routing options and a "polysynth" with different source waveforms (supersaws or similar) and perhaps different sounding filters and even an integrated vocoder (although this should perhaps better be an independent device).