Thomas Larsson
Experienced
That's all
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It does here.
Note that when Global Mix is On in the Reverb block, both Reverb Mix and Effects Mix affect the reverb level.
What's the logic behind that?
It's perfectly logical. It fits the description of the controls in the manual.
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Question: does that mean, that the "global reverb mix" affects every reverb block in every patch, regardless of a patch's "global mix" switch ?
It does here.
Note that when Global Mix is On in the Reverb block, both Reverb Mix and Effects Mix affect the reverb level.
Question: does that mean, that the "global reverb mix" affects every reverb block in every patch, regardless of a patch's "global mix" switch ? If yes, that seems to be not the best way because in certain routings or special FX patches you'd want the reverb unchanged while needing to adjust your normal reverbs to the acoustics of the room.
My understanding was (and hence me questioning the logic), that the "global reverb mix" would work only reverb blocks with "global mix = on" whilst the "global FX mix" setting would affect every effect but the reverb.
This would enable the user to control a global offset for reverb and other effects independently, which IMHO makes much sense, given the special nature or reverberance.
Both global settings affecting the reverb seems redundant to me.
In my axe I turned down global reverbmix to zero, and the reverbeffect didn´t even decrease one dB.
It should turn totally dry I suppose.
And yes , the globalmix-box in the reverb-block is checked.
My reverb-block is a global reverb-block, if that could count for something.
I be damned ! ��
You were right, now it works.
Thanks !
Have this scale been from -50 to +50 all along really ?