Commodore 64

a home computer with a synthesizer-grade sound chip of which people took decades to master. three oscillators with four selectable waveforms, ring modulation, oscillator sync, multi-mode filter and ADSR envelope.

very popular in Europe and mostly due to the demoscene, which stretched the machine's limbs to no end.

two versions of aforementioned chip exist: 6581 (original chip) and 8580 (improved version with working waveform mixing and somewhat more consistent filter curves).

the 6581 has a hardware quirk which produces a DC output with its intensity being regulated by the global volume register. this register can be abused to produce a crude, virtual fourth 4-bit PCM channel.
Furnace supports this with the "Commodore 64 (SID 6581) with software PCM" system. the later 8580 chip fixed this problem, making such PCM nearly inaudible; while other PCM playback methods have been invented, Furnace does not support them at the moment.

effects

info

this chip uses the C64 instrument editor.

channel status

the following icons are displayed when channel status is enabled in the pattern view:

chip config

the following options are available in the Chip Manager window:

the other options are for compatibility with old Furnace and DefleMask, so they won't be documented here.