polyphony, in music, the simultaneous combination of two or more tones or melodic lines (the term derives from the Greek word for “many sounds”).
If your synthesizer has one oscillator per note, then it's polyphonic.
I completely agree with that definiton as well. I also agree with you; if it played multple oscillators at the same time, it would become polyphonic.
From the perspective of a user, this whole assembly is still only one oscillator though. It will only ever play one note at a time, as 99% of all the other Eurorack oscillators will.
I realize the title would maybe be better written as:
555 Oscillator, one frequency generator per note.
While it is fun discussing for the sake of discussing, I think I'm done with this one.
I am content with our disagreement, and even OK with being wrong in your eyes, Zero999.
I have no intention of arguing, or trying to convince anyone.
I just want to understand what you're doing.
If you only want to play one note at a time, you might as well use a single oscillator/555 timer and switch in different resistors, to change the frequency.
If you want to play more than one note simultaneously, then a one way to do this is to have one 555 timer/oscillator, per note and mix them all together. As mentioned earlier in the thread, it can be simplified by using an array of oscillators, for the highest octave and a counter, to give the lower octaves. Not only would this save parts, but also simplify tuning, as only one octave needs to be tuned.
Here's a design for a mixer. It has a gain of
1⁄
10 so the more notes played, the louder it will be.
Note:
R8 to R11 might not be needed. They're there to bias the inputs at half the supply voltage, when they're left unconnected. Try building it with them, then remove them to see if it makes any difference.
Although I've provided the LTSpice file, for reference, don't bother simulating it. Build it!
EDIT: Power supply voltage of LTSpice file.