I have been connecting three edps in the way Travis just described and to be honest...after that 2 will be a sinch... just have an offet of 48 and you will be dandy for every function.
I managed to squeeze three edps on careful offsets but that was cos there where some higher numbered functions i didnt need on any of them.
there is no noticable latency between one and two... three hmmm....it may be there but i cant tell as i always begin loops on one so others are bro synched for timing and this is spot on!!
good luck
Phill
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 23:36:48 -0700 From: travishartnett@gmail.com To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com Subject: Re: midi splitter?
If the PMC-10 can be programmed to send MIDI Notes (and I'm not sure, but I thought it had a reputation as being a full-featured MIDI controller), why not just use the hardware you already have?
MIDI Out from the PMC to EDP1, then patch the MIDI Thru from EDP1 to the MIDI In of EDP2. Set the Source# of the two EDP far enough apart that there are no overlaps and program the PMC to send MIDI notes to control the two EDP. One bank can be for EDP1, the other for EDP2. Your "bank up" and "bank down" buttons would allow you to select which EDP you were controlling.
TH
On Mon, May 12, 2008 at 11:28 PM, Michael Peters < mp@mpeters.de> wrote:
I use two EDPs that are not in sync, and I use a PMC-10 to control one of them - the other one can only be controlled by pushing the EDP pushbuttons. Of course, because the EDPs are not in sync, I don't have to control both EDPs at once - I do different things with them so I would first use the first EDP, then the other.
It would be nice if I had a tiny box that would simply split the signal from the PMC-10, connecting it to both EDPs, but it would have to have some kind of manual switch so the midi signals would either go this way or that way.
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