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Luis, this thread is incredibly funny insofar as the "re:" added to the subject line by the email programme of the first guy who responded got me confused at first, because I read "redo any slave sync?" - I beg your pardon? ;) However, to the sensible part: > Do any of the current existing hardware loopers sync when being slaved? Seriously, none should "drift with time" as you mention, because the definition of being slaved is that they do not drift with time. ("Syncing" here meaning that the slave receives a steady stream of timing information from the master (e.g. MIDI Clock, MTC) and changes its internal time base so it is aligned with it. So even if this process may happen with some flaws, and devices may loose the master-slave relationship, as long as the slave is a slave of the master, what you describe would not happen. So consequently, this may mean that the master-slave relationship got lost?) Things I noticed, however (not necessarily with loopers): 1. some devices tend to have a steady offset with regard to the device they are synced to. This can be explained very easily, simply because the MIDI sync signal takes its time for being generated, routed and interpreted. For that reason, some e.g. drum computers and also software programs have a setting to compensate for this offset. So if you do not change your system, you can bring that offset to zero. However, this will never lead to the devices drifting, they just are a little off in perfect sync. Bob, you also mentioned sync experiments you conducted with the LP1. Does the LP1 also have the aforementioned kind of "clock delay compensation" setting? 2. some devices (both master and slave) tend to jitter, e.g. increase or decrease speed by a small amount. While this may have ugly effects (mainly depending on how the slave reacts to it - the Repeater at least in sw 1.x had a very jittery clock, but did sync fairly well as a slave - see below, which led to some MIDI-synced delay effects, e.g. of the Roland VBass producing ugly clicks), this would also not lead to them drifting apart (as long as the devices stay locked). Summarizing: what you describe (if I understand it correctly) looks like the devices completely loose sync. My experience with hardware loopers in this regard: the only hardware looper I ever owned (and still own) is the Repeater (only used SW 1.x so far). It would sync just fine in the majority of cases, however, there were situations when I lost sync, most prominently when I hit "Slow CFC" on a non-Hitachi-controller CFC. In one (documented on my "Neinnein auf dem kleinen Weg" album, recorded live in Desenzano at a concert organized by Luca Formentini) event, the Repeater was synced (I never used it as a master because of its crappy clock, see above) to a Quasimidi Sirius. In the midst of a (half-hour-long) song, the Repeater would loose sync suddenly and stop playback. I tried to restart it, and succeeded. However, before and after that (and on any other occasion I can remember), the two (or other two, like MC505 and Repeater or Eclipse and Repeater) stayed in sync just fine. Best, Rainer --- http://moinlabs.de http://www.myspace.com/moinlabs http://video.google.de/videosearch?q=moinlabs http://www.jamendo.com/en/artist/straschill/ http://Kunaki.com/MSales.asp?PublisherId=117329