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    Saturation Models (Neve, Tweaker, Oxford Inflator) in FAUST

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    • M
      Mighty23 @clevername27
      last edited by

      @clevername27 said in Saturation Models (Neve, Tweaker, Oxford Inflator) in FAUST:

      or is there also some dynamics processing as well?

      there is no compressor/limiter/gate in the processing. I would consider it 100% multiband waveshaping.

      @Allen said in Saturation Models (Neve, Tweaker, Oxford Inflator) in FAUST:

      For the band split, you may want to use the linkwitz riley instead of svf.

      Yes, for sure. Many Thanks.

      @Allen said in Saturation Models (Neve, Tweaker, Oxford Inflator) in FAUST:

      may I know what CPU you're are running this code on?

      10510u i7 on Windows
      Late 2016 Mini Mac overclocked and open-core operating system.

      Free Party, Free Tekno & Free Software too

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • MorphoiceM
        Morphoice @clevername27
        last edited by Morphoice

        @clevername27 they're not measured, someone on reddit reverse enginered them so they are somewhat common knowledge among the DSP community, I'm not claiming any of those is a copy of something, it's just knowledge I gathered off the web. This is an old post though, I'm making my own functions for saturation now, and I'm using desmos to create them, closely matching stuff I can indeed measure from real hardware and then bring them over in faust. Unfortunately it's all done by hand, I have no Idea on how to "automatically" transfer measurements into transfer functions. It's a lot of guesswork until the curve looks somewhat similar

        Those are the two waveshaper curves I find most pleasing, sonically, anything in between those is great and much faster calculated than the popular tanh for saturation

        Screenshot 2025-01-30 at 14.08.55.png

        https://instagram.com/morphoice - 80s inspired Synthwave Music, Arcade & Gameboy homebrew!

        C griffinboyG 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • C
          clevername27 @Morphoice
          last edited by

          @Morphoice Thank you for sharing. 🍸

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          • griffinboyG
            griffinboy @Morphoice
            last edited by

            @Morphoice

            If you want to find the functions automatically it's not that hard I can show you. It can be done with python or MATLAB very easily.

            You'll quicky discover that a static waveshaper cannot represent the measurements of analog distortion, but you can however create the 'best fit' automatically.

            MorphoiceM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • MorphoiceM
              Morphoice @griffinboy
              last edited by

              @griffinboy it's probably a good idea to morph between waveshaping curves according to signal strength but then again here we are considering hysteresis again ;)

              https://instagram.com/morphoice - 80s inspired Synthwave Music, Arcade & Gameboy homebrew!

              griffinboyG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • griffinboyG
                griffinboy @Morphoice
                last edited by

                @Morphoice

                yeah no, morphing a waveshaper based on signal strength doesn't really have much effect unless it has memory or smoothing. Else you've just done a static transformation of the curve and created another static curve. It has to have memory / hysteresis to actually represent anything nonlinear.

                But collecting transfer function data from analog devices can still be super useful and can inform approximations.

                C 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • ChazroxC
                  Chazrox @Morphoice
                  last edited by

                  @Morphoice Where can I learn how to apply this? Maybe you can tell me what this is and I can do y research. Thanks brotha.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • C
                    clevername27 @griffinboy
                    last edited by

                    This post is deleted!
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                    • C
                      clevername27 @griffinboy
                      last edited by

                      @griffinboy Doing each partial statically will model non-linearity.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • Y
                        Yarost
                        last edited by

                        that its awesome!! can you make with SSL and API?

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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