VCAs
What is a VCA?
VCA stands for Voltage Controlled Amplifier. It lets you control the volume of a signal using control voltage. Simple in concept, but incredibly flexible – VCAs aren’t just for audio, they’re for shaping any signal dynamically.
You’ll often find them paired with envelopes to control how a sound fades in and out. But they also work with LFOs, random sources, and more to modulate signals over time.
Common Uses
- Audio: Control the amplitude of your oscillator signal. Essential for making plucks, pads, and anything with dynamic shape.
- Modulation: Use a VCA to control how much modulation is applied – modulate your modulation.
- CV Routing: VCAs act as switches or gates for control voltages. Want to turn an LFO on and off? VCA.
Types of VCAs
- Linear: Good for CV and modulation signals – scales evenly.
- Exponential: Feels more natural to the human ear – better for audio dynamics.
- Dual / Quad / Mixed VCAs: Common in Eurorack for space-saving. Some offer both linear and exponential modes.
VCAs are essential. You might not think about them much, but if you want your patch to evolve, breathe, pulse, or fade – the VCA is doing the heavy lifting. Modular wisdom: you can never have too many VCAs.