Connecting your synth;

At the back of your synth you'll find the power connector. Any DC voltage
between 9 and 12V will work.  The centre pin needs to be positive, the outside
of the plug is ground. The kind of adapter that will work is very common,
you'll probably have one lying around already, but note that the popular
adapters for BOSS style guitar pedals have their polarity the wrong way around
for our purposes.  On the top-right of the panel you'll find your output. Now
there are two jumper pins inside of the synth, next to the output. If you'd
like to use your synth with a stereo system, like multi-media speakers, or
your hi-fi amp, you should close the jumper (otherwise you'll only get sound
from one speaker), if you'd like to plug your synth into your other modular
gear you should leave it off. If you don't plan on ever using any modular gear
and only use stereo plugs, you can also just solder the jumper pins together.

Playing they keyboard;

Simply play they keys to trigger notes. If you push a new key before you let
go of the last one the pitch will glide to the new pitch smoothly, instead of
triggering a new note. Above that you'll find, on the left, two small buttons
marked "oct" with a "+" and a "-". Using these you can select the octave you'd
like to play in. You can also change octaves while you hold a note, to glide
an octave up. 

The knobs;

The left most knob will tune your synth. When no external control is used the
left knob tunes it within one octave. The middle knob sets the "decay" of the
sound, by that we mean how long it will take for the sound to die out after
you release your key. The right knob modulates the sound, it has a different
effect for each of the presets.

External control;

At the top left we find four minijacks to control your synth from your
analogue sequencer or your modular. The "CV1 and Gate" inputs control pitch
and turn notes on and off.  In this mode the left-most knob should probably be
set all the wat open, that way you get 1V/Octave tracking.  CV2 controls decay
length. If CV2 is used, the middle knob will set the modulation depth.  CV3
corresponds to the modulation or timbre control that each preset has, with the
right knob setting the modulation depth. All of the CV inputs react to
voltages in the 0-5V range.


Switching presets;

Your synth contains a few sounds that you can choose and switch between. To
pick one you push and hold both of the small "oct" buttons at the same time,
and while holding those, press one of the white keys on the keyboard.
C; The original "Grains" sound; this is the default
D: Triangle wave with wave-wrapping
E: "Hoover"
F: Classic fm
G: Saw-wave with hard-sync
A: Phase-distortion
B: Tuned noise

