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van Sinn wrote: > mark francombe wrote: >> >> >> On Fri, Mar 27, 2009 at 12:05 AM, van Sinn <vansinn@post.cybercity.dk >> <mailto:vansinn@post.cybercity.dk>> wrote: >> >> Digitech TSR-24S; >> > > The manual is available from digitech; look in discuntinued products. > > It's a complex device. Two inputs, four outputs, an effects library, > and everything routable just about any which way you want. ah, sounds interesting, hope you don't mind if I ask a couple of details > > This means: Start with an input, pick an effect, link them, pick the > next, link, split into two paralles lines, pick effects and link for > each line, split one line again (to have three parallel), pick and link, > create a feedback with effects in it and link it to a mixer... > Any effect can be reused as you wish; it's a matter of when you run > short of processing power and memory. interesting, that sounds like "freely editable"... ..............is it? > > So, you can do mono in, mono out, mono in stereo out, stereo in stereo > out, one mono in/out + one mono in / stereo out... will it do 2 mono in to the same stereo o/p? > > Reverbs, echoes, single/multipole chrous, flangers, parametric EQ, > multiband EQ, pitch transpose, harmonizing... lowpass/bandpass? does it have a panner (not an autopanner) outputs on XLR? > > The envelope follower means effect parameters can be controlled by so I guess that's assignable to any parameter. > dynamics in playing style, i.e. for ducking reverb, echo feedback > buildup, chorous speed/depth... I mostly use this to add-in some > 4-tap echo and harmonizing when sustaining notes/chords. > > The TSR-24S (dual DSP's) runs a bit hot, so needs free space around it. > TSR-24 (single DSP) runs cooler. > > Programming may take time ;) that's ok :-) andy >