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Table Of Contents
Chapter 2 Delay 25
 Smooth: Evens out the LFO and flutter effect.
 Dry and Wet: These individually control the amount of original and effect signal.
Setting the Feedback
When you set the Feedback slider to the lowest possible value, the Tape Delay
generates a single echo. If Feedback is turned all the way up, the echoes are repeated
ad infinitum.
Note: The levels of the original signal and its taps (echo repeats) tend to accumulate,
and may cause distortion. This is where the internal tape saturation circuit comes to the
rescue—it can be used to ensure that these overdriven signals continue to sound
good.
Setting the Groove Value
The Groove value determines the proximity (how close) of every second delay repeat to
the absolute grid position. A Groove setting of 50% means that every delay will have
the same delay time. Settings below 50% result in every second delay being played
earlier in time. Settings above 50% result in every second delay being played later in
time. When you want to create dotted note values, move the Groove slider all the way
to the right (to 75%); for triplets, select the 33.33% setting.
Filtering the Delay Effect
You can shape the sound of the echoes, using the on-board highpass and lowpass
filters. The filters are located in the feedback circuit, meaning that the filtering effect
increases in intensity with each delay repeat. If you’re after an increasingly “muddy
tone, move the High Cut filter slider towards the left. For ever “thinner echoes, move
the Low Cut filter slider towards the right.
Note: If youre unable to hear the effect, even though you seem to have a suitable
configuration, be sure to check out both the Dry/Wet controls and the filter
settings: Move the High Cut filter slider to the far right, and the Low Cut filter slider to
the far left.