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Hi Per, Thanks for your help. As I said in my first message, its not Repeater that is overloading, it is my final output that is. If I play through my setup without adding any loops to the mix, my gain structure and the final output seems fine with no distortion or apparent overloading. But if I add even a single repeating loop to the mix while I am playing along, the system overloads and eventually distorts. This gain structure with the loop created sounds in the mix is what I am trying to solve, not something that Repeater is doing. This is something that I think would just as easily happen with the EDP. If I bring my initial gain structure down enough to accommodate the addition of looped sound layers to the mix output, then my volume level being too low creates problems for the house mix (who have to turn them up) and also my gain structure risks being too close to the noise floor. But, if I bring my non-looped gain structure up to a good level for the house and the noise floor, when I begin adding in loops to the mix, the volume level output goes up (causing the house engineer to have to back off on my fader) and my output begins to distort. So, what is the best way to get my rig structured properly so that I no longer have this problem. Thanks, Steve > > As far as I see you can fix this in two ways. > > 1 --> turn down Repeater input gain: > You can add more layers until Repeater overloads. > > 2 --> turn down Repeater feedback: > Old layers will fade as you add new layers and Repeater will > not overload. > > Best > > Per Boysen >