Hardware synthesizers are wonderful, especially when they’re homebuilt. Jarek Ziembicki’s AVRSYN started life as an experiment to see if it was possible to cram a complete virtual analog synth into an affordable off-the-shelf microcontroller chip. He succeeded in creating a dual oscillator MIDI-compatible synth that even includes a knob-based user interface. Paul Maddox quickly saw the potential of this little device, ported the design to the more powerful Atmel ATMEGA16 processor and created a ready-to-build circuit board. These days, the project is helmed by Australian Laurie Biddoph who offers AUS$18 PC boards and AUS$86 component kits.

The AVRSYN is impressive because of its incredibly low cost and complete reprogrammability. In essence, it’s a user-programmable synthesizer experimenter’s kit. Even the digital to analog circuitry is unusual. Rather than using an off-the-shelf DAC chip, Ziembicki implemented a 16-bit discrete resistor network using precision resistors. This approach is inexpensive and introduces a little bit of uncertainty, since every unit will sound unique because of manufacturing differences. The project is slowly taking on a life of its own: AVRSYN enthusiast Daniel Kruszyna has updated the software with full ADSR envelopes and additional waveforms and I recently managed to get rudimentary PWM oscillator modulation working on my test rig.

AVRSYN Monophonic Virtual Analog Synth Kits

  • STp

    Okay, this could be good…

  • http://www.lithiummusic.co.uk/ Stef Stabilizer

    Combine this with a nice Boxes'n'Wires programmer / compiler that has prebuilt modules plus room to program your own and this would be a fantastic learning aid and tool for the more experimental Bidule/Max type musicians.

    Imagine wiring up your custom synth on the computer and compiling it to the chip to take on stage..

  • I. George

    is there a way you could make an appegiator with this and any way to make it polyphonic?

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