Mystery 70's DIY Synth Made From Various Electronic Magazine Articles - The RiggySynthi
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- Опубліковано 15 тра 2023
- THE RIGGYSYNTHI made by peter! Let peter know what you think in the comments!
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it also makes @THISMUSEUMISNOTOBSOLETE get bigger and better. :)
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download sounds from this synth to use, here :-
/ sounds-to-use-83027529
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DIY SYNTH HISTORY PLAYLIST :-
• DIY SYNTH HISTORY
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ETI MAGAZINE 4600 :-
worldradiohistory.com/UK/Elec...
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List of Gear/Electronics I USE :-
www.lookmumnocomputer.com/stu...
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THANKUS HUMUNGOUSO to :-
Massive thanks to JASON ROCK for a donation via the website! going towards the next DIY synth!
Markku Rontu
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TheTechromancer
Darren Mackay
DeltaByte
Steve Jones
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CrazyRocketGuy
Ande Spenser
Arnix T-Bone
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Claudio
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Invalid Number
casey
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CoFFeeTaBLesE
Joe Pino
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Matt Followell (PDP-7)
Miles Flavel
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#repair #synthesizer #history - Наука та технологія
PART 2 Setting It Up At The Museum ua-cam.com/video/oNIvnf5KYjc/v-deo.html
What do you Think of The RIGGYSYNTHI? say hi to peter here!
"there is no denying presto patch is the solution, i just think its funny imagining them making a little matrix block thing and realising it was a bad idea and going with a socket instead haha"
Hi Peter.😇
Hi Peter. 👍
Hi Peter! wonderful instrument!
Beautiful machine!
Nice one Peter.
Hi Sam.
Really heart-warming to see it in use again, especially with the dust and grime removed from its front panels ☺
good to meet you peter! and will take good care of it, it'll be in regular use with the other ones! pop over and see it whenever you find yourself over this neck of the woods!
Nice work, Peter. Did you ever play gigs with it?
Grand job Peter! Glad you kept hold of it for us all 😊🖖 It willl live on...
@@David_K_Booth No, my interest was in the electronics for sound generation rather than trying to make music.
Great work! I remember as a kid looking in wonder at the Maplin catalog, and planning building something like this one day… got as far as buying the joystick (which I still have :-) ). Great to see your creation and its new life
It's very nice having the builders interviewed! It makes the synthesizers even more unique, knowing the stories behind them.
I think that guy who originally made that is happy, becouse you made his project big thing to we all enjoy and preserve this synth too. You are the man!
Big shout out to Peter! Excellent work! Big shout out to Sam for his endless energy, enthusiasm and downright Barking Madness (In a good way!) Keep up the good work! 🙂
My cat did get curious there, for a second, when you guys tried to create cat noises ;)
I guess like when a synthesised voice catches our ears, until we notice aspects which give away its synthetic nature
I used collect the magazines in the 70s dreaming I d make one when I had some money ( never did ) it's kind of wierd to see these 40 + years later. It great to see these being collected together in a museum!
Same here. My old Da would buy me electronics magazines and I absorbed hours of brain cycles thinking about and reading about building a synth. I never had the money, but I did have the skills. The closest I got was building a single oscillator that had 4 TR's a few caps, resistors etc - the band I was in at the time loved the sub sub low frequency and wanted to use it in a track but the drummer didn't like it and said it made music too repetitive!
This dude is amazing
Without doubt one of the most fun and informative channels on UA-cam. Always a pleasure to see where Sam will take us next.
Another creazy Synthesizer that about 90% of synth heads have never heard of until, your video. I'd like to visit your museum, definitely going to one day.
yeah! mad one this one!
@@LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER 😇
I love how Peter designed it in the style of the VCS3.
I built something similar in the 70's, remember well cutting all those 3/8" potentiomenter holes in the aluminium front panel with a hole punch. Bits of this, bits of that, Moog ladder filter stolen from the original Moog patents in the library, and a basic sequencer using 74 series TTL. Sadly it's lost in the mists of time......
The spirit of what you're doing with the museum is so cool. Showcasing a lot of this stuff that otherwise would get lost which would be a shame, as there's always passionate people behind who put a lot of work in to these instruments back in the day :)
"Where's that coming from?"
Where the front scuttle, pillar and wing all meet. Such is the life of a mini owner 😂
Yep ha. It doesn't help that the passenger side vent was open with no pipe! Ha
Yeah that'll do it too. 😂
It looks like Peter did a nice job constructing this synth.
You might consider checking those orange roederstein caps in the power supply. The ones I've encountered are often way out of tolerance.
Indeed. I've encountered many cracked ones, that weren't shorted out but were not functional anymore either.
The way you mention going out of your way to help people so often in such an offhand way is very wholesome.
This channel is what happens when you mix Delia Derbyshire with Fred Dibnah, I like it!
Preset blocks for the matrix are a brilliant idea. Couldn't do that with modular patch cables.
You could. Just a bigger preset block. The size of the synth
:D
@@LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER Wasn't the "Presto patch" for the EMS AKS more or less exactly that?
@@angaudlinn well yes but no. it wasnt a literal block yhou pushed into the pin matrix. it was a card slot. whilst they do the same. its different. hence wondering if theytried it before hand
what a beautiful synth. Such a nice aesthetic
Peter, thanks for sharing your synth! I appreciate it, all the way from Indianapolis US of A
Bloody amazing work, Peter! The wiring of the patch bay alone is pretty fantastic. I picked up a slightly larger one at one point and after a few years realized that I would never make use of it. I sold it to a synth repair company at a significant profit, so not all bad ;)
Oh! I LOVE this little guy! With the right touch it could make some beautiful music! You, sir, are the Doctor Who of electronic music, reaching back into the depths of time to bring back wonderfully lovely wibbly wobbly sounds that magically make my toe tap. Thank you so much for your work! Especially rescuing these great pieces of history and making them sing again! 😎🤘☮️
Looks great Peter, thanks a lot for sharing!!
Peter did a great job on this synth! I'm surprised that these early DIY synths didn't have basic distortion or overdrive sections. They could have increased the funkiness of the sounds by quite a bit.
Distortion is usually down to clipping harmonics, which this has in a lot of the gain stages. The way of getting a sine wave in itself is a saturation circuit. It's basically a big overdrive if you look at it that way.
Nothing better than a new synth vid from look mum no computer
He is about 25% nuts and 75% Genius.
Your car is absolutely fit for purpose - you've been fixing it up, and it's even got a shiny paint job! I think all you're missing is just some noise dampening for yourself! 😆
That synth sounds like a Roger, good old Roger. Love the funky sounds old DIY synths have, and glad to see you are adopting these wonderful things and preserving them.
That's a fantastic machine - great job to the builder, Peter, and it's wonderful seeing it cleaned up and working.
Oh, yeah, having blocks with pins in to just chunk into the matrix panel would be pretty nice. I've often wondered where to get ahold of such a matrix; I've toyed with building my own out of a grid of small barrel jacks or 2.5mm jacks, or maybe two overlapping PCBs with holes sized for the 2mm banana plugs, but ..
06:15 it was at this moment my dog jumped up from his slumber starring at the TV 😅
These videos have helped me so much. Previously I faced anxiety and the emotion of feeling stuck academically. Your videos have really helped encourage me in that aspect. A few months ago I got my drivers license. Now these videos are helping to inspire me to overcome drivers anxiety. Here in America a lot of people forget driving is a privilege and not a right. It gets stressful at times because of how people drive. Yet, if you can bring light into my DIY world as well as many others... Then I am honored to play a part as a patreon. Your a beautiful person in the "Look Mum No Computer," series . Keep up the fantastic work!
Fantastic, big smiles here throughout the video and big kudos to Peter (also yourself)!
BTW, if Minis are anything like 2cvs - after eliminating all the other rainwater leaks they often leak THROUGH the wiper spindles...
Great to synth this vintage synth still working ,and being made use of ,Happy days the 70s always exploring new DIY synths and all the new sounds ,ground breaking days ,Thanks to Pete as well ,
Big shout-out to Peter! What a cool and unique hybridisation of various parts and designs. Thanks again for a wonderful video, LMNC!
What a beautiful build. Well done, Peter! And well done Sam in adopting it.
Sounds amazing and this set synth build looks so smart and intuitive to have fun with. Peter is a true pioneer of DYI sound creation.
This monster is fantastic!
Hi Peter! Great job!
My two cats were chilling out with me on the sofa, until the cat noises started. Ears went sideways, eyes wide and then scarpered.
EMS did do a thing for the later VCS3 models called a Prestopatch. This was basically a 2x16 way edge card connector that you could plug in cased prepatched PCBs (some with diodes and resistors) to replace the pins. I seem to remember that for a short period you could also buy a kit with a matrix PCB, allowing you to create your own patches.
Yep. Like buchla. Wonder which one was first
Prestopatches were a flop for the simple reason that they did not store the knob positions too. EMS couldn't sell them and resorted to giving three away with every Synthi to get rid of them. They weren't accurate enough, nor were the Synthis, to have patches that worked the same on all Synthis.
The matrix is NOT the same as the EMS ones because the pins are shorting pins. That means that you can't mix properly and may short outputs together, it does no more than a jackfield. That was the flaw of the ETI synthesizers which were designed by Kim Ryrie (of Fairlight Instruments) to "prove" that analogue synthesizers were inferior to the digital ones his company was making. Moral: be careful what you copy, if you rummage in the dustbin of history you will find historical rubbish.
Two more unrelated facts:
1) Those joysticks were custom made for Allen & Heath for a quadraphonic live mixer they were building for Pink Floyd. The project fell through and they sold them off through a shop in Hackney. Pure unobtainium if you need a replacement when it wears out.
2) That Vero stripboard was bare copper pre-coated with flux containing hydrochloric acid. Nobody ever washed those boards after soldering so eventually it attacks the joints. That was the state of Peter Zinovieff's studio, every time he switched it on he spent all day finding the joints that had gone bad and resoldering them. I'm surprised that everything seems to work, but beware of keeping it in a humid atmosphere.
Meowsome DIY synth. I love its aesthetic... not just the matrix patchbay making it super clean, but also the beige panels with all descriptions in Gill Sans, my favorite typeface ever since I started tinkering with Monotype machines :). This loveliness surely has some crazy cool features!
I am really loving this series i have been binging yoyr videos and allways love the detail and care you put into learning the backstory of these old diy synths and you are a very good entertainer who is also informative. Great job!
“The notes you suggest” - words to live by! Love it!
Project built over years. _YEARS._ Glad for that builder's persistence. I spread a project over a couple of weekends and it's gone on too long. Wow. Also, I like how we can use your samples at our "own peril." 🤣👍
Nice one Peter what an absolutely fascinating project! Bonkers Synth! Great video!
Pretty cool to see you bringing new life to these awesome home built synthesizer.
Last saw this thing (not working) about 30 years ago, when i was much smaller... great to see it working at last!
What a marvelous ,hilarious, and fantastic musical contraption! Thank You for the entertaining and informative Video!
Thanks Peter. Beautiful work.
Your demonstration of the patch bay with explanations and cro display was fascinating. In Australia Classic FM is running a voter poll for their 10 favourite instruments. Of course I included organ and synthesizer.
love these vintage diy synths!
Charly says never talk to strangers.
Really cool build and insight!
best audio channel on the tube. Much love!
Awesome work Peter!
Hi Sam, there were preset blocks for the EMS Synthi called 'prestopatch' we had one at ARU in Cambridge, it didnt go into the matrix itself but rather a blade connector just below the matrix. Thanks for another great vid! :)
Hello Peter ! Hello Sam ! Thank you for this instructive and entertaining video ! 😊
Sam, you deserve 1 million subscribers.
Nice Synth, great video 2x 👍
Thats what drain plugs are for. 🤣🤣 I the same issue in a couple of old Minis. Just check its not the bottom of the windscreen area rusting out.
Looks awesome !!!!
Nice one Peter!!
An excellent addition to the museum.
That breadboard looking patching i/o thingee in the lower right is wild. Never seen anything like that before.
I've just discovered you! Brilliant stuff!!
What a unique instrument. Fantastic! I'm glad it didn't suffer too much in your damp car :) By the way, the Maplin 5600S was the thing I DROOLED over when I was a teenager. I even ordered the list of parts so I could just HAVE the list of parts (I couldn't afford the kit). I'd really love it if you ever got one of those!
Brilliant sounds
"Cat noises" drove my dog insane!
Bangin mate, bangin!
Nice work, Peter.
Like watching Eno during his Roxy days ❤❤
My dog is fascinated with the synth noises
The closed captions for the “cat noises” say “wow, wow, wow…” 😂
The condition is so nice for its years!
As someone who is both obsessed with DIY electronics and Letraset, I am in awe of this. He really did a wonderful job. Wish there was more Letraset out and about where I am!
wtf an orange mini just flew over my house!
It's weird how even though it has the same general features as many other systems, it certainly sounded fresh as implemented. Lots of good sounds, and very little "noise", though that may be a result of thoughtful editing.
Sam driving a beefed up mini is the best thing ever
19:50 you have mini preset blocks in the Erica Synth mini modular. Easy and nifty 👍
Aren't those the buchla style ones?
Amazing video, amazing Peter, amazing Sam, amazing synth! And I love your mini 😅
straight up fire!
It's astounding
Wonderful Channel 👍 Greetings from Germany ❤
Yeah! A new mini series!
Thank you, Sam!
Cheers Peter!
Superb
Yes, there were preset blocks for matrix patch bays made for the EMS later Synthi machines. They called them 'Prestopatch'. On a Synthi AKS you can see an edge type connector just below the patchbay where it plugged in. They also made a giant atchbay with cables going to the connector that allowed you to combine two synths into one.
Yep. As mentioned in pinned comment :D. It was more a wonder if they tried a block and went naaaa
I remember those oscilloscopes from school when I was doing my GCSEs in the earlyish 90s
Hi Sam love these videos of old diy synths. Have you ever tought about triying some paper circuits by ciat lonbarde? cheers
The guy that built this was on point👍👍👍👍
@13:61 I remember buying 61 of those gold-plated spring units and matching busbars, glueing them on and wiring in the 1% resistors for the CV......
This sounds great! Thing is cars, synths and some women all get better with age! I love the glitchy unpredictable VCO's. Wish I was capable of making my own pedals/synths, people have gifts and being a electrician is not one of mine lol
I think., killer find Sam!
what a beauty
That's a pretty wild machine. It sounds like an early video game.......
At minute 15:52: Sounds similar to an alphorn in the Swiss Alps? Yeah, super sound!
Ooooohhhhhh... LETRASET!!!! Those were the days! I miss those days. They don't still make that stuff, do they? Oh, the memories come flooding back. I suppose you can still make your own "rub-ons".
It is great to see yet another old DIY synth being brought back into use. Peter did a great job on this one.
Regarding the matrix. I’m not a synth player, but it seems to me that trying to reconfigure the synth in real time, during a live performance, on a dimly lit stage, would be well nigh impossible. Surely patch cables are more practical, if not as aesthetically pleasing?
My cat wasn't keen on this, but we both watched the whole video anyway.
brooooooooooo nice coop
Love you Sam! ❤
The patch bay is great!