Dolphinado
Inspired
Although I really appreciate just how much fine-grained control the encoders on the front panel of the AM4 give you, as it currently stands, it's not really viable to use them for more coarse-grained changes (e.g. changing a value by >1.5 in one turn of the knob) - you have to really crank that knob over and over again like you're using a ratcheting screwdriver to achieve bigger jumps in value. This feels pretty unnatural and inefficient, both compared to other modelers and analog gear. It's actually far more efficient to type that same greater value into the field in AM4-Edit than it is to crank the encoder that many times, and something about that doesn't feel right to me.
What if the encoders instead took acceleration into account? So the faster you turn the knob, the greater the change in value in that one turn? And the slower you turn the knob, the more fine-grained the change in value?
This would allow the best of both worlds IMO - you'd still have the incredibly fine-grained control we're all used to on Fractal front panels, but with the optional ability to make bigger changes. If this worked I think the trick would be in fine-tuning the acceleration to make it feel natural. I'm pretty sure there are other products with digital encoders that implement something like this, but I can't remember which ones off the top of my head.
What if the encoders instead took acceleration into account? So the faster you turn the knob, the greater the change in value in that one turn? And the slower you turn the knob, the more fine-grained the change in value?
This would allow the best of both worlds IMO - you'd still have the incredibly fine-grained control we're all used to on Fractal front panels, but with the optional ability to make bigger changes. If this worked I think the trick would be in fine-tuning the acceleration to make it feel natural. I'm pretty sure there are other products with digital encoders that implement something like this, but I can't remember which ones off the top of my head.