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Show me a piece of gear that can't be broken, and I'll tell you you're not trying hard enough. What do you mean you have to "adapt your performance after what is actually possible to do with the Repeater"? OF COURSE YOU DO. Try doing an 8 min loop on the EDP. Nope. Try inserting two beats of time into a Repeater loop. Nope. Just because you've found the limits of a piece of gear is no reason to say it's unreliable. I'm telling you people, just like the EDP, the Repeater is an instrument that needs to be learned and played. Practice has helped me immeasurably. I'm so used to it that when I got the EDP, that felt awkward, just as I had once thought the Repeater was. I think any high end looper is going to take time getting good at. Mark Sottilaro Per Boysen wrote: > > > I lent her my Electrix Repeater which glitched in the middle of her > > > performance (god, I love and hate my Repeater........it > > does incredible > > > things and so far, is not very reliable live). > > I have to agree. My experience is that you have to adapt your performnce > after what is actually possible to do with the Repeater. Sometimes when > reaching a too fast tempo the Repeater simply cannot calculate the time > streching. I have also run into problems when recording too long loops. > > Best wishes > > Per Boysen > ________________ > www.boysen.se > www.fuzz.se > www.upsweden.com