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Re: ReEDP tick tick
Thanks again to everyone for your support.
I've tried reseating the chips, but unfortunately, nothing new :(
I noticed that the the noise desappears when I undo the loop in which it
had
appeared... it seems to be logical, but maybe it could be another clue for
you detectives?
I wish I didn't have to send it away, because I'm afraid it could cost
much,
and take long... And I've had it for only a few days! :-( And I don't even
know where I should send it, I have no Gibson dealer around (deep center of
France...)
No one has a miraculus solution? I keep the faith...
----- Original Message -----
From: "a k butler" <akbutler@tiscali.co.uk>
To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com>
Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2005 3:26 PM
Subject: ReEDP tick tick
> At 04:58 27/01/05, you wrote:
> >Cox wrote:
> >
> >>Ok, I will try to anwer your questions;
> >>
> >>1 - I have posted the Wave sound, it's here :
> >>http://www.familoo.com/familoo/RepFiles/9042563465/tick-01.wav . It's
> >>another loop. the input knob was not at its minimum, that's why you can
here
> >>some sound in the background (a mic was plugged in).
>
>
> hmmm
>
> seems to be a dc offset with the clicks,
> (which in the recording shows up as an exponential decay)
>
> It's not the dc offset that occurs because of the noise gate though.
>
> so I'd guess
> 1) not a memory fault, which would produce (afaik) a click without the
offset.
> 2) It's internal to the EDP, because the clicks are very sharp.
>
> :-(
> so if you can't fix it by reseating the chips,
> then it needs to be sent away.
>
> andy butler
>
>
>