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Kim wrote > brothersync > connection that is necessary for putting multiple echoplexes together >like > this. It does two things, one is to synchronize the actual system >clocks of > the different units to operate at the same frequency. That keeps them >from > drifting over time. The second thing is to provide a precise >indication of > when the Record button is pressed. Er, I disagree. I don't think the exact moment of the Record button being pressed is transmitted through Brothersync, at least not in a way that allows simultaneous start of record on 2 slaved EDPs. (It very obviously does signal the exact length of the loop, of course). I don't presume to know more about the EDP than one of it's designers, but I have 2 brand new perfect EDPs which behave as if there is a definate delay between the Master EDP starting to record, and the slave starting to record. I imagine that the 2 loop-start-points are at slightly different places, but that this doesn't matter because brother sync keeps the 2 loops together in that staggered relationship perfectly. i.e. Audio is recorded in sync, but record actually starts on the slave machine after it does on the master. Thus even if you restart the stereo loop, the MIDI delay remains constant and so the stereo image is preserved. If you hit reverse the stereo image is lost (out of sync by twice the MIDI delay) but returning to forward play resyncs perfectly, and this occurs even when Quantise=On. This is most noticeable if a mono signal is recorded on both EDPs. In practice, the only time I notice the difference in timing is when reversing a loop which has mono(on both machines) content. This produces a Haas effect on the reversed loop, which is quite pleasing, although this would be pehaps undesirable if you wanted to record and reverse a true stereo mix. I reckon that using MIDI to slave the controls of the 2 EDPs is always going to be tricky, because of the MIDI delay, however the system as it is works excellently. Brilliant undocumented feature:- Record a stereo-loop, go to the next loop and record 2 different length loops (totally unrelated times if you like), whenever you NextLoop back to your original stereo loop it comes out perfectly synced. This happens (mysteriously) when SwitchQuant=On, although when switching between 2 pairs of loops all having unrelated times the 2 EDPs will change loop (after NextLoop) at different times. Seems like I can connect 2 EDPs and they know whether or not they've got a synced loop waiting to run. (and that's amazing) andy butler