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Hi. The string pad settings were more or less instantaneous in terms of playing a note and hearing a sound. To make it fade in, you would use either the included volume pedal or your volume knob on your instrument of choice. To the best of my recollection, the sounds were as follows - droning string pad settings, some had octave above and some had octave below sounds mixed in with a short delay or echo tail. They all sounded pretty lush. As far as depth of the ring mod - hard to say as I've never had a ring modulation device before, but it sounded like the ring mod effects I've heard on Terje Rypdal recordings. You could create quite a racket with it or be musical. The reverse delays were particularly attractive. Pretty smooth. You could do the sort of Adrian Belew backwards guitar effect with that setting. I would suggest you get one of the folks who own one to review it better than I could since I spent maybe 20 minutes with the one in the store and there were a good 10 presets I listened to for 20 seconds before moving on, so all the subtle details are likely being missed. Sorry I wasn't of more help, but if you find one you have to try it. Todd Madson Musician, Mountain Biker, Stunt Kite Flyer, BeOS/MacOS/Linux/WinNt user. http://www.waste.org/~crash/index.html On Wed, 26 May 1999, K. Douglas Baldwin wrote: > Please, Todd, tell us again about how you demo'd the Space Station, then > handed it to someone else who made you laugh and laugh... :-) > Seriously, if you can give more detail on the settings, it might push > someone (like me, ferinstance) to either buy it or scratch it off their > list. Does the string pad just add a slow-rise envelope? How deep is the > ring mod? As long as it has a sample-and-hold function, discussion here >at > LD seems appropriate. > PS Between the time I wrote this note and went to send it, the other > responses told me much of what I wanted to know. I tell you, Loopers are > CONNECTED. (Probably with good old audio wire and 1/4" jacks, too) >