Download The Fender Bassman 5F6-A Family of Preamplifier Circuits—A Wave Digital Filter Case Study
The Fender Bassman model 5F6-A was released in 1958 and has become one of the most revered guitar amplifiers of all time. It is the progenitor of a long line of related Fender designs in addition to inspiring Marshall’s first amplifier design. This paper presents a Wave Digital Filter study of the preamplifier circuit of 5F6-Abased amplifiers, utilizing recent theoretical advances to enable the simultaneous simulation of its four nonlinear vacuum tube triodes. The Dempwolf triode model is applied along with an iterative Newton solver to calculate the scattering at the 25 port R-type adapter at the root of the WDF tree. Simulation results are compared to “ground truth” SPICE data showing excellent agreement.
Download RT-WDF — A Modular Wave Digital Filter Library with Support for Arbitrary Topologies and Multiple Nonlinearities
Wave Digital Filters (WDF) [1] are a popular approach for virtual analog modeling [2]. They provide a computationally efficient way to simulate lumped physical systems with well-studied numerical properties. Recent work by Werner et al. [3, 4] enables the use of WDFs to model systems with complicated topologies and multiple/multiport nonlinearities, to a degree not previously known. We present an efficient, portable, modular, and open-source C++ library for real time Wave Digital Filter modeling: RT-WDF [5]. The library allows a WDF to be specified in an object-oriented tree with the same structure as a WDF tree and implements the most recent advances in the field. We give an architectural overview and introduce the main concepts of operation on three separate case studies: a switchable attenuator, the Bassman tone stack, and a common-cathode triode amplifier. It is further shown how to expand the existent set of non-linear models to encourage custom extensions. Index Terms— wave digital filter, software, real time, virtual analog modeling, multiple nonlinearities
Download Efficient Anti-aliasing of a Complex Polygonal Oscillator
Digital oscillators with discontinuities in their time domain signal derivative suffer from an increased noise floor due to the unbound spectrum generated by these discontinuities. Common antialiasing schemes that aim to suppress the unwanted fold-back of higher frequencies can become computationally expensive, as they often involve repeated sample rate manipulation and filtering. In this paper, the authors present an effective approach to applying the four-point polyBLAMP method to the continuous order polygonal oscillator by deriving a closed form expression for the derivative jumps which is only valid at the discontinuities. Compared to the traditional oversampling approach, the resulting SNR improvements of 20 dB correspond to 2–4× oversampling at 25× lower computational complexity, all while offering a higher suppression of aliasing artifacts in the audible range.
Download WDF Modeling of a Korg MS-50 Based Non-linear Diode Bridge VCF
The voltage-controlled low-pass filter of the Korg MS-50 synthesizer is built around a non-linear diode bridge as the cutoff frequency control element, which greatly contributes to the sound of this vintage synthesizer. In this paper, we introduce the overall filter circuitry and give an in-depth analysis of this diode bridge. It is further shown how to turn the small signal equivalence circuit of the bridge into the necessary two-resistor configuration to uncover the underlying Sallen-Key structure. In a second step, recent advances in the field of WDFs are used to turn a simplified version of the circuit into a virtual-analog model. This model is then examined both in the small-signal linear domain as well as in the non-linear region with inputs of different amplitudes and frequencies to characterize the behavior of such diode bridges as cutoff frequency control elements.
Download Generalizing Root Variable Choice in Wave Digital Filters with Grouped Nonlinearities
Previous grouped-nonlinearity formulations for Wave Digital Filter (WDF) modeling of nonlinear audio circuits assumed that nonlinear (NL) devices with memoryless voltage–current characteristics were modeled as voltage-controlled current sources (VCCSs). These formulations cannot accommodate nonlinear devices whose equations cannot be written as NL VCCSs, and they cannot accommodate circuits with cutsets composed entirely of current sources (including NL VCCSs). In this paper we generalize independent and dependent variable choice at the root of WDF trees to accommodate both these cases, and review two graph theorems for avoiding forbidden cutsets and loops in general.