Pg8x Vst Download
PG8X is a JX-8P inspired synthesizer plug-in for Windows. It is inspired by the JX8P and I am trying to capture as much of it's character as possible. The “working title” for it is PG8X, trying to merge the names of the progammer PG-800 and JX-8P without coming into conflict with copyrighted names.
Pg 8x Vst Download Full
pg8x: virtual synthesizerUPDATE: new native C++ version is being developed. News on the status can be found on my FaceBook page.
(click on the image for a full size screenshot) This VST is still under development, and some features might not be working at this time. Please, use it at your own risk, and feel free to provide any feedback, bug reports or suggestions, preferably through the comments below. This version contains some factory presets to demonstrate the sound. The VST can be downloaded below in the attachments section. In order to play it as a stand-alone synth, one can use SAVIHost. There is a thread discussing this synth on the KVR forums. Click here for a demo video.
If you find this synth useful and want to support the development, feel free to donate something...
| Features: - 6 voice polyphony
- Two DCO's with Saw, Square, Pulse, Noise
- Hard Sync and Ring Modulation
- Two exponential envelop generators
- 24 dB resonant LP filter
- HP filter (3 stages)
- Stereo Chorus
Technical information: - Framework (GUI) in Synthedit
- Sound generation (DCOs and VCF) entirely in custom modules
- up to 4 x 16-fold oversampled oscillator
- 4-fold oversampled filter
- Custom voice allocation
- 6 Key assignment modes:
- Poly (re-assignment of voices)
- Poly2 (round robin)
- Unison (two voices in unison)
- Unison2 (second voice shifted by 1 octave)
- Mono
- Mono2 (all voices in unison)
- MIDI Learn: MIDI Controllers can be assigned by right-clicking on the slider
- Automatic adjustment of samplerate
- Manual and automatic settings for oversampling of the oscillators
A manual will follow soon. Acknoledgements: Thanks to Dave Haupt and Kelly Lynch for some of their modules and, of course, Jeff McClintock for the Synthedit.
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