- This topic has 13 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 5 months ago by .
Viewing 14 posts - 1 through 14 (of 14 total)
Viewing 14 posts - 1 through 14 (of 14 total)
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Home › Forums › Help/Technical Questions › Can the Micro POG or POG2 be modded so that…
Each octave has its own, 100% wet output jack? Like, say, the Micro POG having one output jack for the dry signal, one for the “Sub Octave” and one for the “Octave Up”?
No-one?
Okay…did I ask something that’s absurdly stupid?! :poke:
I’m not absolutely sure.
If the DSP is constantly emitting all of the voices, and the sliders just act as a mixer, than yes, it would be possible.
If the DSP has one output and mixes it itself based on what the sliders are set on, than no, not possible.
It’s probably designed the latter way.
Maybe buy 3 MicroPogs?
Sure! As long as you’re paying, I wouldn’t mind buying 4 or 5 POG2s.
Even if it is possible to do, I’d think it would be very hard to do, SMD boards are really hard to mod. There are some people who do it, but personally I wouldn’t.
I think the best thing would be to put one of these after it: http://www.activemusician.com/item–EM.RLL-SX21
Without seeing a schematic I can’t say for sure but theoretically, if each octave has it’s own output from the DSP it should be possible for each to have it’s own output. I would add a buffer to each output to isolate the DSP.
Okay then, is it possible to get a one-off done for me from EHX?
Probably not. I don’t think they do too much custom stuff.
yeah, if it’s possible, you’d have to have a 3rd party do it.
Dang! I was starting to think that, in case of the POGs, the signal processing was entirely programmed inside the DSP, and so the only way to even get around to mod the pedal would be somehow edit the code inside the DSP. Hence the question of whether EHX would wanna do a one-off.
When I modded my uPOG I derived that the octave controls adjusts only a voltage which tells the DSP how much octave to add on it’s output. They are not analog mixing controls. The Dry control is an analog mixing control. The DSP only has the one output thus the octaves cannot be split to have different outputs.
Sorry.
Your Tone God,
Andrew
thanks for that bit of info TTG! I figured as much.