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Table Of Contents
28 Chapter 3 Distortion
Bitcrusher
The Bitcrusher is a low resolution digital distortion effect. You can use it to emulate the
sound of early digital audio, create artificial aliasing by dividing the sample rate, or
distort signals until they are unrecognizable.
Bitcrusher Parameters
 Drive slider and field: Sets the amount of gain (in decibels) applied to the input signal.
 Resolution slider and field: Sets the bit rate (between 1 and 24 bits).
 Downsampling slider and field: Sets the amount by which the sample rate is reduced.
A value of 1x leaves the signal unchanged, a value of 2x halves the sample rate, and a
value of 10x reduces the sample rate to one-tenth of the original signal. (For example,
if you set Downsampling to 10x, a 44.1 kHz signal is sampled at just 4.41 kHz.)
 Mode buttons: Click one of the buttons to set the distortion mode to Folded, Cut, or
Displaced (each of which is described in the following section).
 Clip Level slider and field: Sets the point below the normal threshold at which the
signal starts clipping.
 Mix slider and field (extended parameter): Determines the balance of dry and wet
signals.
Using the Bitcrusher
Setting the Resolution parameter to a value lower than the bit rate of the original
signal degrades the signal, introducing digital distortion. Lowering the value increases
the number of sampling errors, generating more distortion. At extremely low bit rates,
the amount of distortion can be greater than the level of the usable signal.
The Mode buttons determine whether signal peaks that exceed the clip level are
Folded, Cut, or Displaced (as displayed on the button icons and the resulting waveform
in the display). The kind of clipping that occurs in digital systems is usually closest to
that of the center mode (Cut). Internal distortion may generate clipping similar to the
types generated by the other two modes.
Raising the Drive level tends to increase the amount of clipping at the output of the
Bitcrusher as well.