
I have ordered some logic level mosfet's of various types so I will hopefully get to see if that improves things later in the week as from what you guys are saying, and my own checks I am fairly hopeful that the issue is the drop in voltage supplied to the GSM modem by the transistor as it should have 5V but with the transistor I have currently it is getting ~4.3V which is obviously just enough for it to boot but not connect. TL/DR: I want to use the cool sounds of Transistor Bass as a synth.I have put together a full circuit diagram of what I currently have and attached it (will put it in line in a minute).
I also recognized I'm not the first one searching for this at all I've searched for a possibility to include an ADSR controller to the associated mixer track, but didn't found one.
Also no ADSR settings on the sample's channel
Consolidated the Pattern, stretched the sample and -as one might expect- it also sounded gross. Tried out even more mixer effects like Patcher. Included Gross Beat with the 1/2 speed setting, which did the trick somehow, but sounded. Had a look for more ADSR options in the Miscellaneous settings of Transistor Bass, but they don't exist. Slowing down the projects tempo to half speed didn't effect the audible length of the note, but as I later noticed, the Option Gate Length does to a certain point.Īlso the envelope didn't satisfy my needs (I know it's modelled on the Roland TB-303 which didn't come with Attack, Release or Sustain), so I've tried a few things to cheat around it: To achieve this I turned the Decay knob to the max, deselected the build-in sequencer for Piano Roll control and draw a longer note (2 bars) - to almost no effect at all. one bar and shaping the envelope to more than TB is allowing for a more sustained output like "EEEEEAAAAAOOOOW" instead of "EAOOOOOW".
I've tried two things with Transistor Bass: lengthening one note of Transistor Bass to more than approx.