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Table Of Contents
110 Effects and effect plug-ins
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panning of the delays increases. This is commonly referred to as a
"ping-pong" delay.
Drive: When this control is turned all the way to the left, the delayed
signal is repeated only once. Turned all the way to the right, the
feedback is seemingly endless and the repetitions continue for a long
time.
The actual strength of the effect is dependent on the material, since
the feedback loop (as explained earlier) is addressed via compression
and uses a "tape saturation" effect. If you send a "loud" signal to the
delay, then the feedback will sound longer than at a lower level as
compression "brings it up" to a certain level. If you are used to
"purely digital" delays, then this might take some getting used to, but
it will probably sound "livelier".
Flanger
The "Flange" effect is similar to that of the chorus, but does have a
different technical and historical background. It came about by
chance: Someone (various sources say John Lennon) slowed down
one of two running interconnected tape machines in a studio with his