The most important part of the Glue R&D was getting the discrete Blackmer VCA model up and running, which is done. The R&D left for The Glue v2 is implementing a JFET input op-amp model, which is this week's work, and then investigating a basic gyrator based non-linear transformer model, which I want to spend at most a month on. I've got a DIY-RE SSL bus compressor kit and a that I'm going to measure each component of, writing that value on the schematic, and then assemble, which will save some guesswork when matching to my model. It has an optional transformer output stage, which I'll use to see how good the gyrator transformer model is, and either include it if I'm happy, or leave it out for a later update if I'm not happy with the sound of the model compared to the analog device. I've also got a Stam audio SA-4000 mk3 to compare to, but they wouldn't provide schematics, so it may be difficult to match any presets to that if they've altered the circuit too much.Funkybot's Evil Twin wrote: Sun Jun 08, 2025 1:48 pm Sounds like great progress, Andy! With developments like sub-circuits coming online, how much more big R&D work do you think is still ahead before you can start really operationalizing all this (i.e. getting plugins out the door that leverage the new tech)? The R&D itself is super cool, but of course, it's ultimately a means to an end. I genuinely hope you're able to reach a point where circuit simulation becomes almost trivial on your end, and it allows you to turn around insanely high-quality plugins, with The Scream-level attention to detail, at a faster pace than before. And I don't say that as a knock or criticism, just more of a wish for a more Cytomic yellow and black future.
I think despite claims from lots of vendors, very few are doing analog emulation at anywhere near the levels you're on the cusp of and it's exciting.
Then it's all the UI and application level stuff to do, and all the regular packaging stuff like manual, audio examples, videos, and presets. I will report progress on all of these steps as I do them, and it will take as long as it takes.
The DSP output of the Cytomic Circuit Solver at any point in time is always production ready. For testing I skip the extended optimisations, but at any time for a release I switch that back on and it takes around an hour to crunch through a bunch of automated symbolic optimisations to keep the cpu as low as possible.
What I am hoping for is that with the extra income from The Glue v2 I can hire someone to help with the UI and application C++ and web and marketing and demo / tutorial type stuff so I can concentrate on the circuit solver / DSP and then it will be much quicker to complete products since once the DSP is done the rest of the work can be done in parallel with me working on the next chunk product.
