There was a way to piggyback two SID chips together and address them individually. The "Stereo SID-Player" program supported six-voice arrangements for such a configuration. John Roache did not have such a configuration, so his arrangements were standard three-voice files. The software in that case would just show levels duplicated for 4-5-6, though it didn't actually send data to both chips. My own setup had a switch I could use to make both chips play in unison when not playing 6-voice files.
I know the SID's only capable of three simul-voices, so what are the '123456" at the top, under 'the band'?
cyutaeha 2 years ago
There was a way to piggyback two SID chips together and address them individually. The "Stereo SID-Player" program supported six-voice arrangements for such a configuration. John Roache did not have such a configuration, so his arrangements were standard three-voice files. The software in that case would just show levels duplicated for 4-5-6, though it didn't actually send data to both chips. My own setup had a switch I could use to make both chips play in unison when not playing 6-voice files.
Keeper1st 2 years ago 3
that's something i'd love to see and hear in person.
cyutaeha 2 years ago