Sorry if this has been asked before, but can anyone give me or point me at an explanation of how the smooth, make-before-break drawbars work, please?
I'm doing a VB3/MIDI controller (having failed to track down a Native Instuments B4D) using a Raspberry Pi as the brains. I have an old set of H100 smooth drawbars, but I can't for the life of me figure out how they work. I understand that the sliding contact is always connecting a pair of busbars (make before break). But every busbar is connected to every other busbar, according to my multimeter.
I think I read somewhere that what is actually connecting the busbars, on the little circuit board at the end, are one ohm resistances. Is that right? Does that mean that the busbar assembly is a "stepped potentiometer" using very low resistances? And that my multimeter just isn't capable of measuring resistances that small?
I've found a thread from someone doing a similar thing with older break-before-make busbars, but that's all so far.
I'm doing a VB3/MIDI controller (having failed to track down a Native Instuments B4D) using a Raspberry Pi as the brains. I have an old set of H100 smooth drawbars, but I can't for the life of me figure out how they work. I understand that the sliding contact is always connecting a pair of busbars (make before break). But every busbar is connected to every other busbar, according to my multimeter.
I think I read somewhere that what is actually connecting the busbars, on the little circuit board at the end, are one ohm resistances. Is that right? Does that mean that the busbar assembly is a "stepped potentiometer" using very low resistances? And that my multimeter just isn't capable of measuring resistances that small?
I've found a thread from someone doing a similar thing with older break-before-make busbars, but that's all so far.
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