so after plenty of searching, i've concluded that nobody makes an eq pedal that fits my requirements, so i'm going to have to create something unique. i'm not an electrical engineer, and my soldering skills are pretty basic, so i will have to pay a tech to do the work, but i was hoping to get some help with the design from you knowledgable folks. basically, i want to have a 3 band fully parametric eq pedal, with hp and lp filters (pretty much like the pro tools default eq plugin in guitar pedal form), and it needs to be controllable via midi. the only way i know how to achieve this is with molten voltage pedal sync:
http://www.moltenvoltage.com/pedalsync/PedalSync_audio_control_MIDI_chips_modules_index.htmli emailed molten voltage, and they said i need the "four pots" modules:
http://www.moltenvoltage.com/pedalsync/documentation/PedalSync_MV-56_MV-56B_Four_Pots_Datasheet.pdfmost of the info on that data sheet is over my head, but i'm guessing one module can control four pots, so i'd need four modules to control 15 pots (high pass gain, high pass freq, high pass q, low gain, low freq, low q, mid gain, mid freq, mid q, high gain, high freq, high q, low pass gain, low pass freq, low pass q). can anyone recommend what parts to use that will be compatible with the "four pots" modules and be a great choice sonically? i could buy an existing parametric eq pedal such as the empress paraeq or wmd utility (if the parts are compatible?) and ad more components and rehouse it all in an appropriately sized enclosure, or go for a more ground up approach.
the most important thing is that it's a super high quality, low noise, musical eq. i'd be powering it with a cioks ciokolate, and i have a 4-15VDC (100mA) slot or a 9VAC (800mA) slot open to power it. this is all pretty confusing for me as i'm so clueless about electrical engineering, and the replies i've gotten from my emails to molten voltage haven't been very detailed or helpful (not a complaint, as i'm sure they're used to dealing with pedal designers, not clueless musicians). i'm not expecting anyone to design this pedal for me or tell me every little part required, i'm more looking for little suggestions or ideas that i might not think of and that my tech might not think of (he's mostly an amp repair guy), or even for someone to tell me that part of what i want to do isn't possible, if that's the case, so any thoughts like that i could get from you guys would be amazing!
cheers,
simon