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> my advise would be to get a nice synth and tape one of it's keys > down. yeah, that's what you said last time, you weenie;-) really, what i want is to have a steady tone cross the loop point without an artifact, think tambura or whale sounds, and i already have it in my EDP. and since my EDP is "born to lead" and my repeater is "born to follow" i've got the best of both worlds (ie smooth long soundscapes and incredibly tweekable rhythmic loopiness). it's just that having nice compact flash stored tamburaesque guitar stuff would save me money on synths and tape;-) the trim function is what makes me think that a crossfade control must be there and i'm missing it or it's almost there and could be a software mod. i mean, that's where the crossfade function is on my emu, it's associated with trim. ----- Original Message ----- From: <sine@zerocrossing.net> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Wednesday, January 22, 2003 1:05 PM Subject: Re: delay chips and design > There is a trim feature that can be useful, but if you're looking for a perfect > sine wave, my advise would be to get a nice synth and tape one of it's keys > down. > > Mark Sottilaro > > Lance Chance wrote: > > > don't get me wrong, i love my repeater and what it exclusively offers >in the > > way of sync functions and "on-the-fly" waveform editing. my EDP just seems > > to have this seamless quality to it, and i'm convinced that there has >to be > > some method of identifying which machine will be strong at which function > > depending on what method is used to create the over all effect (delay). > > is the EDP a "zero-crossing adjusted" loop machine, as opposed to the > > repeater which is, i assume, a "cross-fade style" machine like the method > > mentioned by Dennis in his post? > > i sort of assumed that the cross fade was responsible for the > > inconsistencies in the sine on the repeater. is there any way to adjust > > the crossfade so that "dip" is not as apparent, i didn't see anything >in the > > manual about it, and i did look a little. understand that i use a > > consistent sine here as an ideal goal, but actually, my input is more > > dynamic and multitembral than that. > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: "Mark Sottilaro" <sine@zerocrossing.net> > > To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> > > Sent: Wednesday, January 22, 2003 11:08 AM > > Subject: Re: delay chips and design > > > > > There is no pop at the loop point in the Repeater, but a slight "dip" > > > in the audio level, probably the sound of the cross fade working. Much > > > better than the "click" of the JamMan IMO. > > > > > > Mark Sottilaro > > > > > > On Wednesday, January 22, 2003, at 08:42 AM, Dennis Leas wrote: > > > > I suspect the Repeater's designers (who are really bright folks) just > > > > needed > > > > to tweak things a bit to eliminate the "pop." Unfortunately, time ran > > > > out. > > > > > > > > > > > > Dennis Leas > > > > ------------------- > > > > dennis@mail.worldserver.com > > > > > > > > > > > >