
Minimoog clone VCF + VCA (AMORE)

The prototype version of the board. There are a few differences compared to the final board.
This AMORE module combines clones of
the Minimoog VCF and VCA on one board. The core circuits are the same as my
previous Minimoog clone VCF and VCA. On the VCF, On this new version, I added a Vactrol type optocoupler
to make the resonance voltage controlled. Additionally, I changed the front- and
back ends to match the AMORE specifications.
The core of this
filter is almost exactly the same circuit as in the Minimoog.
Only a couple of minor changes had to be made, to be able to run
it on +-15 volts, instead of +-10 volts. These changes were
developed by René Schmitz,
and you can find the schematics on
his web site.
To get the best performance, I matched all transistors and
capacitors in the transistor ladder. Of course, the transistors
for the differential amplifier were also matched. This filter really
sounds sweet. It has the classic Minomoog sound and noise is
quite low. I don't have genuine Minimoog to compare, but maybe my
filter is a little quieter thanks to the BC550C low noise
transistors.
The Minimoog VCA is using only discrete transistors as active components. It has two cascaded stages that can be voltage
controlled individually. After that there is a discrete buffer amplifier.
In the Minimoog, the first stage is controlled by the envelope
generator and the second stage is controlled by the footpedal. I
reversed this, as having the EG on the second input gives much
better signal to noise ratio. The footpedal input is used for
amplitude modulation in my module.
To get the best performance, I
matched all transistor pairs. I also used polyester caps in
the signal path. There are no electrolytic caps in the signal
path in my version of the VCA. The Minimoog has electrolytic
output DC blocking caps.
I changed some of the resistor values so that the VCA would run
as well as possible on +-15 volts supply.
This is not a very high fidelity VCA, but the noise level is quite
low. There is some distortion, but not more than most other good VCAs, I suppose. There is also some CV feedthrough that causes a
slight click when very short attack times are used. This is
normally masked by the input signal. Maybe it even adds to the
punchiness of the sound.
I have trimmed the offset to get no DC shift before the DC
blocking capacitor. But there is some AC-coupling of the CV
signals anyway.
Trimming
There are two trimmers, marked
balance 1 and 2, for nulling the DC offset of the VCA. Measure before the DC
blocking capacitor at the output and adjust the trimmers so there is minimal
change in the DC voltage when you sweep both CVs.
The VCF has three trimmers. ”Regen cal” adjusts the maximum resonance.
Adjust it so that the filter just starts to oscillate at some fairly low cutoff
frequency. This adjustment is done according to personal taste. "Scale"
sets the volts per octave scaling of the filter. Set the filter to self
oscillation and feed connector pin 1 with exactly 1, 2, 3, 4 volts and measure
the frequency. Trim until you get a doubling of the frequency for each volt's
increase. "Range" adjusts the cutoff frequency and can be set to taste,
so the cutoff knob on the front panel covers the range you want.
Skill level required: MEDIUM
This module needs matching of transistors, using the Moog transistor matcher (schematics available on the web). Otherwise there are no particular difficulties and the circuit uses no hard to find parts.
Circuit board layout (PDF-file)
Component placement (PDF-file)
| Connector pin | signal |
on this module |
| 1 | 1 oct/V | VCF keyboard tracking |
| 2 | in 1 | VCA input |
| 3 | CV 1 | VCA AM CV |
| 4 | CV 2 | VCA envelope CV |
| 5 | CV 3 | not used |
| 6 | -15 V | -15 V |
| 7 | out 1 | output from VCA |
| 8 | -1 V | -1 V |
| 9 | gnd | gnd |
| 10 | key |
- |
| 11 | switch 1 | bypass VCA |
| 12 | switch 2 | bypass VCF |
| 13 | out 2 | output from VCF |
| 14 | +15 V | +15 V |
| 15 | +10 V | not used |
| 16 | aux output | not used |
| 17 | in 2 | VCF input |
| 18 | CV 4 | VCF cutoff CV |
| 19 | CV 5 | VCF emphasis CV |
| 20 | CV 6 | not used |