BV512 Vocoder : BV512 parameters

BV512 parameters
On the front panel of the BV512 Vocoder, you will find the following parameters and displays:
In Bypass mode, the carrier signal passes through the device unaffected and the modulator signal is disregarded. In On mode, the device outputs the vocoded or equalized signal. Off mode cuts the output, silencing the device.
The lower display allows you to adjust the level of each filter frequency band, by clicking and dragging the corresponding bar. In vocoder mode this affects the vocoded sound. In equalizer mode, this is where you cut or boost frequencies. To reset a band to ±0 dB, press [Command] (Mac) or [Ctrl] (Win) and click on its bar in the display. To reset all bands, select “Reset Band Levels” from the device context menu.
Note: when FFT (512) mode is selected, each of the 32 bars in the display corresponds to several frequency bands, with bars to the right in the display controlling progressively more bands (due to the FFT bands being linearly distributed over the frequency range).
Clicking this button “freezes” the current filter settings. While the button is lit, the modulator signal doesn’t affect the sound - the carrier signal is filtered with the settings as they were the moment you activated Hold. Click the button again to turn off Hold. Hold is also automatically reset (turned off) when you stop sequencer playback - just like the pitch bend and modulation wheels on synth devices.
This is a global attack time control, affecting all envelope followers (see “Filter bands”). Normally you probably want this set to zero, to make the vocoder react as quick as possible. Raising the Attack time can be useful for “smearing” sounds, creating pads, etc.
Shifts the carrier filters up or down in frequency, drastically changing the character of the vocoded (or equalized) sound. This parameter can be controlled via CV, for phaser-like sweeps and special effects.
HF Emph
(High Frequency Emphasis)
Boosts the high frequencies in the carrier signal. This is sometimes desired to get a clearer vocoded sound. The reason is that a carrier signal should theoretically contain roughly equal energies in all frequency ranges for best results - in a typical synth sound the high frequencies are often weaker than the low frequencies. Raising the HF Emph control will rectify this.

BV512 Vocoder : BV512 parameters