- 5 low frequency oscillators (LFOs) to modulate the incoming signal;
- 3 transposition modules + clean blend;
- a 4-pole resonant low-pass filter (LPF);
- a room/hall reverb algorithm.
The pedal splits the incoming signal and, via its complex pitch shifter, adds to it an octave up, an octave down, and a fifth. All the parts are then mixed back together and sent through the 4-pole (24 dB/Oct) filter, which is controlled by the sum of two LFOs. The first LFO is a sine wave running at a fixed rate. The second one is a trapezoid wave; its rate and depth are controlled by the RATE and RANGE knobs, respectively.
After pitch shifting and filtering, the signal gets smoothed out by the room reverb and finally goes to the output jack.
All in all, this complex effect is controlled by just two knobs: RATE (LFO rate) and RANGE (LFO depth). The third knob controls the reverb. Think of it as "three Rs": RATE, RANGE, and REVERB.
Having started out as a VA synth prototype and gradually transformed into its current form, the Prism-9 combines many different elements, which are all fine-tuned to play well together and provide easy control over the resulting sound.