I concur with Seffan. Wave digital works great for linear circuits, but as soon as you start adding non-linearties things get awkward. It is much easier to using either direct MNA for larger circuits, or for smaller ones you can do it all with manually solving the system of equations. The next step is to look into things like the DK-Method, either directly using MNA (which I favour) or via the regular State Space formulation.
Andy On Wed, 11 Mar 2020 at 19:59, STEFFAN DIEDRICHSEN <sdiedrich...@me.com> wrote: > The method being teached in that workshop is the wave-digital-filter > approach, developed by Fettweiss. > I saw a tutorial at the dafx 2019 given by Kurt James Werner and I have to > admit, that this method is quite awkward to apply and the results are > somehow underwhelming. Well, they’re OK, but there’s still a matching error. > > Just search for papers, that cite A.Fettweis,“Wavedigitalfilters:Theory > and Practice,”. > > Best, > > Steffan > > > > > On 11.03.2020|KW11, at 12:27, Jerry Evans <je...@novadsp.com> wrote: > > > > In 2017 CCRMA ran a short workshop: > > https://ccrma.stanford.edu/workshops/virtualanalogmodeling-2017. > > > > Are there any papers or examples etc. that are generally available? > > > > TIA > > > > Jerry. > > > > _______________________________________________ > > dupswapdrop: music-dsp mailing list > > music-dsp@music.columbia.edu > > https://lists.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/music-dsp > > > > _______________________________________________ > dupswapdrop: music-dsp mailing list > music-dsp@music.columbia.edu > https://lists.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/music-dsp
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