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Kim writes: One of the parameters (MuteMode, I think) failed to store itself properly on powerdown. I have had that experience. What happens is that it reverts to "continuous" even if you had preset it to "start". The Weird thing is: Once you call it up it says "Start", but if you shift it back and forth between the two, it actually ends up doing what it says it was already doing. (i.e. It starts from the beginning of the loop instead of cycling continuously.) Other Random observations: Don't tread hard on the footswitch if you think that function isn't working properly. You'll just break the footswitch in about six months. (I did this with the "Undo" button.) It seems to me that the Signal to Noise Ratio occasionally deteriorates if you let the machine get too hot. This could just be an illusion created by the noise becoming harder to ignore once you notice it, but I don't think so. The undo button is essentially useless without lots of extra memory, but terrific once you've got the memory. If you've built up to a certain level of layering, play lots of chords while steping on the undo button alot and when the chords die away you get you're starting loop back, ready to be build up. Playing the same pattern over and over again with the overdub button on creates a sound like a really cool digital delay. If you want to sound like an Ordinary delay unit, set the Feedback at about twelve o'clock, and keep the Overdub button on. I find it easier to work with the feedback knob than a feedback pedal. You can position the knob in a variety of diffferent ways, and remember what those positions sound like, which is not easy to do with a pedal. Also, There's usually lots of time to reach over and tweak the knob once you get a good loop going. The speed at which you move the feedback knob will effect the sound that occcurs in the loop afterwards, but I'm not sure exactly how. Any Info on that from anyone? One fun structure to work with. Create a loop, solo on it for a while until you hear some thing you like, then turn on overdub and store it. Then solo some more until you create something else you like, then store that. When it get too full, you can either 1) push the undo button several times until you get it down to size again (which removes the most recent loops.) Or 2) drop the feed back level (which fades out the earliest loops or 3) create a new loop and then jump back and forth between the two. That's all I can think of for awhile. Happy looping Teed Rockwell 74164.3703@Compuserve.com