Oberheim - PFV-1 pedal (voltage modulator)
Here's some pics of the Oberheim PFV-1 pedal
Not a guitar pedal, it's main function is sending voltage to a modular control voltage synthesiser.
It has a rate control for speed, an on off switch for connecting the two internal 9 volt batteries,
and another switch under the pedal which I assume is for either switching the modulation off,
or for switching between sine and square wave output
I've never used this pedal, I think I got it with an Oberheim Four-Voice in the 80's
Someone's clipped the battery leads and one tranny looks cooked
I was gonna sell it, but I think it might be cool to mod it into something funky
Not sure who made the casing, but I'm sure someone on the forum will recognise it.
Cheers, squatch
Not a guitar pedal, it's main function is sending voltage to a modular control voltage synthesiser.
It has a rate control for speed, an on off switch for connecting the two internal 9 volt batteries,
and another switch under the pedal which I assume is for either switching the modulation off,
or for switching between sine and square wave output
I've never used this pedal, I think I got it with an Oberheim Four-Voice in the 80's
Someone's clipped the battery leads and one tranny looks cooked
I was gonna sell it, but I think it might be cool to mod it into something funky
Not sure who made the casing, but I'm sure someone on the forum will recognise it.
Cheers, squatch
- Zokk
- Resistor Ronker
Hi squatch, I've missed this post! Thanks for the info about this one, pretty rare!
What is the voltage output of this pedal? is it 0-5V? or +/-5V?
What is the voltage output of this pedal? is it 0-5V? or +/-5V?
Hi Zokk,
Good question...not sure of the voltage output
I suppose it be the designed to match an SEM module, probably 10V
I'm assuming it outputs sine rather than square wave
Because it takes two 9 volt cells it's probably 10V
Cheers
Good question...not sure of the voltage output
I suppose it be the designed to match an SEM module, probably 10V
I'm assuming it outputs sine rather than square wave
Because it takes two 9 volt cells it's probably 10V
Cheers
Hey egrefin, sorry I sold that pedal on ebay a few years back
I regretted selling it 'cos it went for peanuts..some guy in New York got it
I shoulda kept it and repurposed it in hindsight...but I thought it would bring more than $40!
I regretted selling it 'cos it went for peanuts..some guy in New York got it
I shoulda kept it and repurposed it in hindsight...but I thought it would bring more than $40!