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  2. Oscillator sync - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscillator_sync

    Oscillator sync is a feature in some synthesizers with two or more VCOs, DCOs, or "virtual" oscillators. As one oscillator finishes a cycle, it resets the period of another oscillator, forcing the latter to have the same base frequency .

  3. Neutron (synthesizer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutron_(synthesizer)

    Each oscillator has five blendable waveforms: sine, triangle, sawtooth, square and "tone mod", a waveshaping oscillator. There is oscillator sync, PWM and a noise source. A mix knob blends the mixture of both oscillators. External sounds can be run through the signal chain. The oscillator range can be changed using the "range" button.

  4. Roland Jupiter-6 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_Jupiter-6

    Available waveforms include sawtooth, triangle, variable width pulse, square, and noise. Unusually, the JP-6 allows simultaneous selection of any or all of the waveforms in each of its two oscillator banks, an option not found on the JP-8. Oscillator sync and cross modulation are also available. "Unison Mode" allows all 12 oscillators to be ...

  5. Holdover in synchronization applications - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holdover_in...

    A combination of quartz based reference oscillator (such as an OCXO) and modern correction algorithms can get good results in Holdover applications. [23] The holdover capability then is provided either by a free running local oscillator, or a local oscillator that is steered with software that retains knowledge of its past performance. [23]

  6. Roland JD-990 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_JD-990

    The Roland JD-990 Super JD is an updated version of the Roland JD-800 synthesizer in the form of a module with expanded capabilities, which was released in 1993 by Roland Corporation.

  7. Phase synchronization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phase_synchronization

    One way to keep a local oscillator "phase synchronized" with a remote transmitter uses a phase-locked loop. See also ... Sync by S. H. Strogatz (2002).

  8. Multimoog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multimoog

    The Multimoog is a monophonic analog synthesizer manufactured by Moog Music from 1978 to 1981. Derived from the earlier Micromoog (internally, it consists of a stock Micromoog circuit board with the extra circuitry on a second board), the Multimoog was intended to be a less expensive alternative to the Minimoog.

  9. ARP Odyssey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARP_Odyssey

    The Odyssey is a two-oscillator analog synthesizer, and one of the first with duophonic capabilities (the ability to play two notes at the same time). All parameters, including a resonant low-pass filter, a non-resonant high-pass filter, ADSR and AR envelopes, a sine and square wave LFO, and a sample-and-hold function are controllable with sliders and switches on the front panel.