The circuitbenders Harmonic Engine PCB is a clone of the E&MM Harmonic Generator. This was a project by Paul Williams, published in Electronics & Music Maker magazine way back in 1981.The circuit uses a 4046 Phased Locked Loop (PLL) to track an input signal and generate a squarewave output at harmonic intervals to the frequency of the input. The squarewave can be set to +/- three octaves, and can also produce 3rd or 5th harmonies.
Thats the theory anyway. In practice the note tracking only works really reliably if you use very basic waveforms at the input. If you use anything else, then everything very quickly descends into a beautiful kind of chaos, with all kinds of bizarre gurgling digital squeaks and squeals vomiting forth. Its especially effective with percussion sounds, converting each hit into some kind of warped electronic splatter.
This is just the bare unpopulated PCB. We do not supply kits for the full build, Theres nothing rare or very difficult to get hold of in this build, although the 4526 4-bit binary counter IC appears to be one of those little used 4000 series CMOS chips that aren't stocked by many component suppliers. Theres no setup or calibration involved, and theres nothing complex to go wrong, so as long as you are careful with your soldering theres no reason why this shouldn't be a beginners project. The PCB has board mounted pots at the front and a eurorack power connector at the back, so it could easily be used as a modular synth module and we do sell a eurorack panel but theres no reason that you couldn't use it as a stand alone effect in a desktop case, or wire the pots to the board so you could use it as a guitar pedal.
PLEASE NOTE: The standard PCB is ideally designed to operate at line and mic levels, so if you're building it as a eurorack module using the optional panel, you may need a way of attenuating the signal on the way in, and possibly boosting it on the way out. This is precisely what our Redshift Dual Level Shifter is designed to do. You can find this in our other listings.
You can download the build guide and parts list from:
http://www.mediafire.com/download/6tq7aflvr68tbrb/circuitbenders+Harmonic+Engine+build+guide.pdf
You can find a couple of demo videos of this board in action on YouTube at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qc577U3gsTI
and
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jzniz8twFMo
The board will run on a 9v battery or a 12v power supply, but check out the build guide for power options.