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WMD Geiger Counter Civilian Issue


sommy

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Has anyone tried one of these out yet? There is very, very little information out there available on the unit.

 

I'm tempted. It is a whole $100 cheaper than the original, but you lose so much -- I don't mind not having CV input so much, but you have way less wavetables to work with and you lose the ability to control sample rate and bit depth on the fly, apparently.

 

I believe there's a store around here in Berkley that carries WMD stuff -- I'm likely going to go check it out at some point this week.

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everything is speculation right now, there is NO real info on it anywhere, and certainly no demos to show how closely related it is to the full size... for all we know there could be trimpots or the controls aren't what we think they are (the tone know supposedly does more than just tone)... I have the original but I'm still curious to see what this and the arcane preamp is, WMD just has to get it together and update the website with some useful info and clips.

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I'd gladly sacricice the tone and gain knobs for samplerate and sample resolution/frequency. Way more useful.

 

If you already have a wavetable and a basic micro (which I'm assuming the civilian issue has) then the "hardware" for bit depth and samplerate are already in there. Just not "wired" to any pots.

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I'm sticking with the original, but I can see this ones appeal-- the Geiger is quite a powerful distortion pedal that can do all flavors dirt, so for 'regular' guitar applications, I think this is a great pedal and the compromise of size&presets vs bitcrushing a good one that makes sense-- I could see many people never using the that side of the pedal in real world applications, hence 'civilian issue'. Its basically a distortion multieffect; you could fill up those presets with pretty legit gated fuzz's ala devi/zvex, prunes&custardish tones, mild overdrive to heavy distortion, etc, with just the gain/wavetables/tone.

 

If you're doing any other signal processing with it, or looking for a bitcrusher, the original Geiger Counter is an excellent choice and an abyss to explore. You can really make something out of nothing with the pedal, I love it with percussion and synths especially, though I have other analog pedals that do many of the geigers tones with bass that I use, otherwise it would get more bass use as well.

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I'd gladly sacricice the tone and gain knobs for samplerate and sample resolution/frequency. Way more useful.


If you already have a wavetable and a basic micro (which I'm assuming the civilian issue has) then the "hardware" for bit depth and samplerate are already in there. Just not "wired" to any pots.

 

 

 

Fair enough, but even with the knob swap, or if they somehow crammed Tone/Gain & Sample Rate/Bit Depth on board, what it still lacks is the CV input. No ability to use an expression pedal... no ability to run through a LFO. Thus, at least 50% of the magic of the pedal is lost.

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Is it possible that the function knob could be used to change the bitrate in conjunction with the tone knob or something?

 

 

Not likely. The original function knob keys through the wave tables with a twist (clockwise or counterclock). Tapping on it keys in the order for sample and depth. That leaves the tap feature open since that VITAL feature is stripped off the civy. BUT the civy allegedly has presets, and this is the only place you can access them unless they are tied to the stomp switch. That would be absurd, because you would have to stomp the switch 16 times through all the presets to bypass. So in all likelikood, IF the civy has presets like I have read, they would have to be available through pressing the function knob. It's the only place you could put the feature on THAT setup that would make any sense.

 

I will also add the further potential fail of that setup would be that if you are on preset 1 and stomp your foot down twice to preset 3, ANY twist of the foot can cause the knob to twist to a different wave table, making the civy even less well considered.

 

 

The way to have made that pedal worthwhile would be:

 

1. Switch Tone/Gain for Sample Bitrate/Bit Depth knobs (if you had to resort to either/or for that enclosure)

 

2. Add the CV input

 

3. Have a seperate stomp switch for presets, and relegate the function button to work EXACTLY as original recipe

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what is supposed to do a bit crusher?

 

 

Bit crushing on it's own is digital headroom reduction. If an analog signal wave can have an "infinate" number of amplitude variations, then an 8-bit crusher will only have 256. The smooth slope of a soundwave will turn itno a staircase with 256 steps. Usually there's a reduction knob on a bitcrusher, reducing it from 8bit to 7bit, from 7bit to 6bit, to 5bit, to 4bit, and so on. 7bit will be a staircase of the same "height" as the other but only 128 steps. 6bit only 64, 5bit only 32, etc.

 

itm akes for a very "steppy" soundwave. Fuzzlike, digital, abrassive. Often enough bitcrushers have a samplerate knob as well which reduce the resolution (stepping) but on the horizontal axis rather than the vertical. Makes things nintendo-y.

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At one point you were talking about naming it. Also weren't you going to make some to sell?

 

 

I'm so not close to that point. As it stands now, I'm still trying to get through the Hollow Earth list. I havent made one (that works) in a couple months because of priorities, bad batches of PCBs, lack of time and lack of motivation.

 

Over the holidays, I came really close to telling everyone on the HE list "sorry, but I can't make these anymore, they're just too frusterating". I'm not building right now because I have to think abotu how I can do this, if at all.

 

So yeah, the bitcrusher in my avatar is so so SO not on my mind right now. I might make a small handful (

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Has anyone tried one of these out yet? There is very, very little information out there available on the unit.


I'm tempted. It is a whole $100 cheaper than the original, but you lose so much -- I don't mind not having CV input so much, but you have way less wavetables to work with and you lose the ability to control sample rate and bit depth on the fly, apparently.


I believe there's a store around here in Berkley that carries WMD stuff -- I'm likely going to go check it out at some point this week.

 

Controlling sample rate and bit crushing on a Bit Crusher/Down Sampler pedal seems pretty integral to me :idk:

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I went over to Berkley Music Company today, tried out both pedals -- had to buy the original. It's scary how touch-sensitive some of the wavetables are. Highly, highly, highly recommended, and totally better than the "Civilian Issue."

 

I can't even begin to describe how awesome this thing is on sub basses, especially with reduced bitrates.

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