trb
Experienced
Truly right ! I found a large improvement for VC with that last beta release, even with my dull playingIt will. The VC already works much better than before.
Truly right ! I found a large improvement for VC with that last beta release, even with my dull playingIt will. The VC already works much better than before.
I don't know if it can be implemented, but having drop D in the pitch block would be fantastic
i dont think you can tune individual strings w a shifter you need something like a evh dtuna
Yep totally agree with above, would be great to have a drop D tuning option but really struggle to see how it could possibly work
I think the Fishman triple play uses a technology that detects the harmonic behind the fretted note
A pickup cannot hear the "harmonic behind the fretted note".I think the Fishman triple play uses a technology that detects the harmonic behind the fretted note in order to allow the fretboard to be split into different synth tones. I'm not sure that technology could be implemented here. The triple play uses a divided pickup but if such an algorithm could be developed, then once you get above A if the accompanying behind the fretted note harmonic is detected, it would indicate that the note is actually on the E string. I'm not suggesting this is possible without a hex pickup, but if it could be done that might be how to approach it.
I couldn't find the original article I read and couldn't remember details, I think the gist of what I was getting at is still valid. It's just that instead of listening to the harmonic behind the string it's listening to that high pitch frequency that comes from the pick or pluck attack?
Wasn't Floyd Rose the first who made a Sustainer?
I couldn't find the original article I read and couldn't remember details, I think the gist of what I was getting at is still valid. It's just that instead of listening to the harmonic behind the string it's listening to that high pitch frequency that comes from the pick or pluck attack?
If by "drop d" you mean "the lowest string is tuned to a D and everything else is normal guitar tuning" -- then, no, it's not possible. Not with a standard guitar pickup. It's near impossible to know where a note is being played in order to do this. Take the lowest A on your guitar. In drop D that can be an open 2nd string or the 7th fret on your 1st string -- only one of those positions would warrant being shifted down a whole tone in drop D tuning. You need both pitch and string detection to do this well and with a standard pickup you have only pitch detection.I don't know if it can be implemented, but having drop D in the pitch block would be fantastic
its kind of like a sustainer
you can simulate it with something like
freqout or compression but the actual
pickup that does it is physically causing the string to vibrate it not a software but a real world interaction
from the magnets
Maybe my understanding of transient is off then. How would you describe the transient? I know it's a very short-lived frequency hence the name, I always thought it was higher pitched in nature.