dk_ace said:My guess is that the OP is using a virtual rig approach and needs quite a few delays to cover different delay tempos in a patch. I have several patches like that for certain situations. My patches have an eighth, dotted eighth, and quarter note triplet delay.
I run mono, so I've toyed with the idea of using the dual delay panned hard l/r and using a controller to switch between them to free up one block. This would work I think if you use the Sum L/R output.
D
javajunkie said:dk_ace said:My guess is that the OP is using a virtual rig approach and needs quite a few delays to cover different delay tempos in a patch. I have several patches like that for certain situations. My patches have an eighth, dotted eighth, and quarter note triplet delay.
I run mono, so I've toyed with the idea of using the dual delay panned hard l/r and using a controller to switch between them to free up one block. This would work I think if you use the Sum L/R output.
D
You dont need to do that. You can pan them center and use the level controls to turn each on/off or use both.
FractalAudio said:Use the "Dual Delay" type. That's two basically independent delays.
javajunkie said:dk_ace said:My guess is that the OP is using a virtual rig approach and needs quite a few delays to cover different delay tempos in a patch. I have several patches like that for certain situations. My patches have an eighth, dotted eighth, and quarter note triplet delay.
I run mono, so I've toyed with the idea of using the dual delay panned hard l/r and using a controller to switch between them to free up one block. This would work I think if you use the Sum L/R output.
D
You dont need to do that. You can pan them center and use the level controls to turn each on/off or use both.
DJD100 said:Thanks...
That would require Pedal Control would it not?
Could I do that with IA Switches?
I only have two pedals on my ART X-15 and don't want anymore on the floor.
javajunkie said:dk_ace said:My guess is that the OP is using a virtual rig approach and needs quite a few delays to cover different delay tempos in a patch. I have several patches like that for certain situations. My patches have an eighth, dotted eighth, and quarter note triplet delay.
I run mono, so I've toyed with the idea of using the dual delay panned hard l/r and using a controller to switch between them to free up one block. This would work I think if you use the Sum L/R output.
D
You dont need to do that. You can pan them center and use the level controls to turn each on/off or use both.
DJD100 said:Thanks...
That would require Pedal Control would it not?
Could I do that with IA Switches?
I only have two pedals on my ART X-15 and don't want anymore on the floor.
javajunkie said:dk_ace said:My guess is that the OP is using a virtual rig approach and needs quite a few delays to cover different delay tempos in a patch. I have several patches like that for certain situations. My patches have an eighth, dotted eighth, and quarter note triplet delay.
I run mono, so I've toyed with the idea of using the dual delay panned hard l/r and using a controller to switch between them to free up one block. This would work I think if you use the Sum L/R output.
D
You dont need to do that. You can pan them center and use the level controls to turn each on/off or use both.
javajunkie said:You can do it with IA switches. Set an external controller to the CC# of your IA switch. Attach a modifier to the left and right level. Modifier source should be the external controller you that is controlled by the IA. start and end should be 0-100% on one and 100-0% on the other.
When you hit the IA it will toggle between the 2 delay lines. You will have to share the drive and, high and low cut on both lines. You can assign each its own modulation though.
Bakerman said:Have you tried the multidelay's 10-tap or Rhythm tap modes? Those actually use less CPU% than a normal delay if you use mono mode and 5 taps or less.