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> -----Original Message----- > From: Lance Chance [mailto:lrc8918@louisiana.edu] > > don't get me wrong, i love my repeater and the project that i'm working >on > right now features it as a main piece. > i see your points about controller issues. i do like the > integrated nature > of the direct pedal plug and dedicated foot controller, but for different > controllers it all works out to be the same. > however, my unit does have a cfc "tick" and, for me, between the >operating > noisefloor and peak values, i would say that i probably have about 4db of > boogie room. i don't know, my edp seems wider that that, > somehow. If you only have 4db of headroom in your Repeater, then maybe you don't have your input and output levels set right? The Repeater is very sensitive to gain staging. It can sound like crap if you don't nail the levels just right. Once you do get it dialed in, it's a reasonably quiet unit with enough headroom to work with. > there > is also a warmth to the sound of an edp that seems lacking in the > repeater. > it sort of sounds like the repeater is "mpeg-ing" everything and you can > hear the packets being delivered. I won't argue with that. The Repeater doesn't have the best A/D-D/A converters in the world. <snip the rest> The reason I bought a Repeater, and the reason I stay with it, is that it's a great song writing tool as well as a looper. I have four tracks to work with. I can save my loops and fool around with them on my PC. I can experiment with chord progressions with lead lines on a separate track. It's the perfect bridge between a multitrack recorder and a looper (it's both!). I realize other people/loopers may not be thinking this way, and may be more into a live performance thing. If I didn't care about using the Repeater as a scratch recorder for song ideas as well as a looper, then I'd be using the Echoplex. -- Mike Barrs