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> That's misleading. > Sure, in Max you can compensate for a mis-matched pedal. > (with some loss of definition) > ...but a midi-controller, of FX unit needs a pedal with > the correct spec. Not sure I follow you. Why do you think there would be loss of definition? If anything I have more, because I am not limited to 0-127, but I can take a continuous amp change (down to as many decimal points as I desire) and convert that into any range I like, mapped to an express pedal. What I have experienced is a more fluid change of parameters in my system vs, with MIDI, because the source of the scale is not forced into chucks of 0-127, but literally thousands of data points. I can't think of a more efficient and fast way to control my parameter changes. The calculation and conversion of a db range (e.g., -10db to 0db) to a linear scale, and then to my parameter values (some number to some number, even in decimals) is almost instantanous. But you are right. What I is stated below is misleading without qualifying that this is in the context of max/msp. Otherwise, the pedal is useless for expression changes. Kris > andy > > Krispen Hartung wrote: >> >> I am no expert, but Jeff Kaiser, who has done some research on this >with >> max/msp, says that any volume pedal will work, because it is just >> inducing an amplitude change. >