Bit by bit, I'm repairing and bringing back to functionality a bunch of pedals that have been sitting unused for too long. One of them is my old EHX Y-Triggered Filter.
It's an interesting beast, with a somewhat idiosyncratic sound. I
think it's a swept bandpass, but you know I'm not all that sure anymore. It doesn't ever really seem to get thin, the way a bandpass would when swept high. The circuit, even with the much more readable redraw from Scruffie (thanks, mate!) doesn't look like anything else out there, or at least isn't immediately recognizable as such.
The "Range" switch is essentially two different resonance settings: one high and one low. Naturally, I just HAD to mod it, by installing a 3-way toggle to change the value of C13, for a higher and lower sweep range. More amenable to bass now, when C13 = 6800pf.
It has a single bidirectional control that does direction and sensitivity in one knob. Turn it clockwise and it sweeps down, counterclockwise sweeps up, and no real sweep in the middle. But the correspondance between sweep and picking is not the 1:1 one finds on many envelope-controlled filters. It just doesn't feel like a sensitivity control. Moreover, as you can see below, the sidechain starts out with a clipping circuit, using a back-to-back diode pair that
restricts dynamic range. Now why would you want to do that if you were trying to extract an input signal envelope? It also triggers weird, occasionally not accepting further plucks.
All of which leads me to realize that the name of the pedal does not lie. It is NOT an envelope-controlled filter, it is an envelope-
generator-controlled filter. That is,
somewhere in all of that (and I honestly can't figure out where), there is a preset envelope/transient generator that is initiated by the input signal reaching some threshold, which triggers a fixed sweep. There may be something adaptive about it that
might yield a changing decay time, but I can't see it.
Actually, I probably lied. I gather it initiates two equal-but-opposite fixed sweeps, that cancel each other out when mixed 50/50. Hence the other part of the name: Y-triggered. Two parallel sweep generators converge on one point, and the knob adjusts their balance.
I cannot for the life of me figure out what sort of a filter topology this is.
So, if you have any ideas about how this beast works, I'd love to hear them. A search for Youtube demos finds only two.
