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What I observe is that as an overdub is added, the earlier material is slightly lowered in volume. This makes sense- otherwise your loop would get louder and louder. I have never noticed a drop in volume from the loop just playing without additional overdubs. Trying to control the result of the RC-20's built in feedback parameter via i/o levels might be possible, but _very_ tricky. You could perhaps start with low input gain and high output level, then as dubs are added shift both so the volume remains constant. The dubs would be recorded at higher and levels so they are louder in the mix. A couple problems with this: First it would take a lot of dilegence to tweak the knobs just right. Second, there will be good levels which keep your noise floor down and avoid clipping, so only a narrow range of the controls will probably be practical. Incidentally, since you are considering the Line6, I'll offer that the Repeater might also be a good solution. The price difference between the RC-20 and Repeater is a lot less than when I bought the Boss pedal, but the Repeater does way, way more. Particulary, it does four simutaneous tracks, each of which can have an independent level. Sound useful for your application? I hope this hope your dissonant cognition. -Steven Date: Thu, 13 Jun 2002 10:14:27 -0700 From: "W. L. Altman" <waltman@mta.ca> To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com Subject: Re: Boss RC-20 Now I'm suffering the slightest cognitive dissonance. Is the decay curve of multi-dubs on the RC-20 a problem that cannot be dealt with via input/output levels? If I can work with it then the extra 5 minutes of loop are worth it. But if the Line6 does a superior job, 28 secs can be enough for me at this stage. Ever in need of reassurance... W.L. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! - Official partner of 2002 FIFA World Cup http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com