User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Overview
- Terminology
- Overview Diagram
- 1. 7 Segment Display
- 2. Preset/Select/Hold To Edit Buttons
- 3. Up & Down Buttons
- 4. Mix Knob
- 5. Lo Cut Knob
- 6. Hi Cut Knob:
- 7. Bypass LED
- 8. Bypass/Preset Down Switch:
- 9. Time Division LEDs
- 10. Division Button
- 11. Regen Knob
- 12. Time Knob
- 13. Modulation Depth Knob
- 14. Modulation Waveform Display & Select Button
- 15. Modulation Speed Knob
- 16. Tempo LED
- 17. Tap-Tempo Switch
- Inputs & Outputs
- Controls
- Presets
- MIDI
- Global Settings
- Example Settings
- Usage Cases
- Technical Specifications
- Warranty
- FCC Compliance
Discovery Delay – TerminologyTerminology
6
Revision: 1.2 (7/1/2021)
Terminology
Here is a list of a few common terms used in this manual� Please familiarize yourself
with the terms you do not already know� Understanding these terms will better help
you understand how to use the Discovery Delay, or any delay for that matter�
Signal
A signal in this text refers to an audio signal, which is a representation of sound in
the form of changing level of electrical voltage� Such a signal can come from your
guitar pickups, through your guitar cable and into the Discovery� It may also come
from previous eect, or from your ampliers eects send�
Dry signal
e Dry signal refers to your unaected guitar signal, or whatever signal that has
been connected to the input of the Discovery� is has no delay eect on it� When
the pedal is bypassed, all you are hearing is the dry signal�
Wet Signal
e Wet signal refers to the delay eect itself only without any dry signal� A delay
makes a copy of your dry signal, and plays it a certain amount of time later, which
creates the wet signal� e Dry and Wet signals are then mixed to form the nal out-
put signal�
Repeats
Repeats is a term used among users of Delay eects that refers to the actual repeated
dry signal that make up the wet signal� e wet signal is a repeated copy of the dry
signal that feedbacks into itself and keeps repeating what you play into it� Repeats
are also commonly referred to as “echoes”
Milliseconds (ms)
A millisecond is 1/1000 of a second� Milliseconds are abbreviated as “ms”� us, it
takes 1000 ms to make up 1 whole second�