I also tried it last night and found that
the switching is audible - albeit subtly so.
I tried recording and looking at the result
in a waveform editor. It seemed there was a
minimum crossfade time of up to 30-40 ms.
However from looking at the waveform it seems the major
part of the crossfade is over after about 5-10 ms.
actually i like that my acpr has this "slew"
Its nice and musical instead of the clicks and distortion
that i think a near-instant crossfade would impart to
the sound.
apples and oranges, as always.
Kim
Citat paradigmshiftbeats <paradigmshiftbeats@...>:
the switching is audible - albeit subtly so.
I tried recording and looking at the result
in a waveform editor. It seemed there was a
minimum crossfade time of up to 30-40 ms.
However from looking at the waveform it seems the major
part of the crossfade is over after about 5-10 ms.
actually i like that my acpr has this "slew"
Its nice and musical instead of the clicks and distortion
that i think a near-instant crossfade would impart to
the sound.
apples and oranges, as always.
Kim
Citat paradigmshiftbeats <paradigmshiftbeats@...>:
> --- In SergeModular@yahoogroups.com, "paradigmshiftbeats"
> <paradigmshiftbeats@...> wrote:
> >
> > I know I've done "hard switching" between two ACPR inputs using
> > the Sequencer in the past. I'll try again tonight using a DSG if
> > I can find the time and report back.
>
> I checked this tonight and can confirm that the hard switching is
> achievable possible using the gate output of a cycled DSG/DTG. No
> audible slewing, and in fact this switching works effectively even
> when being driven by audio rate modulation from the DSG, producing
> nice Fm/sideband effects!
>
> Chris
>
>