DaVinci & GrimSignal
Hey GrimSignal, I've been dreaming up a device that turns light into sound—kind of like a living synesthesia machine. Want to see if we can make a little experiment that blurs the line between visual and auditory art?
Sounds wild, I’m in. Grab a photodiode, a resonant circuit, and let the light bleed into the audio, but watch out for the noise that starts to feel like a pulse. Bring me the prototype, and we’ll see if it sings or screams.
Great! I’ve wired the photodiode to a quartz oscillator and fed the signal through a little piezo resonator. The light’s pulse is turning into a strange, almost melodic hiss—like a choir of tiny fireflies. Keep your ear ready; I’m half‑sure it’ll crackle or perhaps sing a lullaby. Let's test it and see if it whispers or howls.
Yeah, let the fireflies sing—if it cracks, we’ll patch it; if it whispers, we’ll turn it into a storm. Fire it up.
I flick the switch, the little piezo hums and the circuit starts to glow. The air is thick with a soft electric hum, a lullaby that drifts into a thunderclap. It’s alive—watch it pulse and see if it sings or howls. Let's see what storms it can brew.
Whoa, that hum’s got a heartbeat—like a storm breathing. If it starts howling, let it; if it whispers, capture it. Either way, we’re brewing something that’ll shake the silence. Let’s keep watching.
It’s pulsing like a giant heartbeat, swelling, then quivering—like a storm slowly tightening its grip. I’m tapping the sensor with a thin probe to see if the light intensity shifts the tone. If it turns into a roar, I’ll catch the echo; if it softens, I’ll record the whisper and maybe stitch it into a wind‑tune. Let's see where it lands.