Lexicon Vortex emulation?

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try the Guitar Rig 2 LFOs and Modifiers. You can set two different A/B channels of effects in the same rig and have the Modifiers, LFOs, or any of the other signal routing effects manually or automatically switch between different effects like reverbs or delays for example. I don't know the Vortex, but it sounds like something Guitar Rig can pull off, as I was fiddling with some aforementioned Vortex-like effects last night.

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The effects setting changes are indeed something like that. It's really incredible that the morph time can be set to something like a 20 ms to 2 second rate. There's even looping in there you can use the expression pedal to control.

But the peculiar effects that the Lexicon has I don't think I've ever really heard the like of in anything else hardware or software. Ahead of it's time it was never popular.

Click here for Lexicon Vortex User's Manual

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as I can read from the manual, the morphing is just presets interpolation isn't it?

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yep - it's the effects that make the looping crazy... the effects really do morph between settings like the Symptohm, though. All parameters meander or speed towards one another. I can't think of anything that sounds like it at all unless there's an emulation which is what I was initially hoping.

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bobby yarrow wrote:I have Nitro and a Vortex, and I can't see where they'd be similar. Nitro is filters, Vortex is delays, basically.
Erm.... Nitro contains delays! Although they are called "Glide", which I believe matches the term used by the Vortex also. The similarity is that the delay output tap can be freely and smoothly moved back and forth. Beyond that, there may be no similarity at all, I dunno, but I'm sure that common feature means that you could get some very similar patches out of both.

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I just want a real one :)

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I can't think of anything that sounds like it at all unless there's an emulation which is what I was initially hoping.
As are we all, mate...but if you want Lexicon sound, unfortunately you need to buy a Lexicon. You'll just have to make do with something else that patch morphs, but doesn't sound remotely anything like Lexicon.

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waiting man wrote:as I can read from the manual, the morphing is just presets interpolation isn't it?
"Just presets interpolation" is an understatement. It can morph between different algorithms, e.g., aerosol <-> bleen, which have different processing blocks and routings, and in the middle you get something even crazier than what you're starting with. I'd like a software Vortex for ease of editing and saving presets as well as tempo sync.

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atomota wrote:
waiting man wrote:as I can read from the manual, the morphing is just presets interpolation isn't it?
"Just presets interpolation" is an understatement. It can morph between different algorithms, e.g., aerosol <-> bleen, which have different processing blocks and routings, and in the middle you get something even crazier than what you're starting with. I'd like a software Vortex for ease of editing and saving presets as well as tempo sync.
Indeed. It's one of only a few things that make me yearn for hardware.
I'd think that they'd release it as a plugin - it's sound is much more for the electronic
music market & given that it wasn't made for very long for that reason it seems the simplest
way to make money off of it now would be to use the algorithms in a plugin.

On a side note how is it that people emulate digital hardware? I've read the specs on something
analog and understand how to emulate it (not that I personally could) but I don't see where you'd
even begin to make your own "bleen" as strange as that sounds.

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atomota wrote:
waiting man wrote:as I can read from the manual, the morphing is just presets interpolation isn't it?
"Just presets interpolation" is an understatement. It can morph between different algorithms, e.g., aerosol <-> bleen, which have different processing blocks and routings, and in the middle you get something even crazier than what you're starting with. I'd like a software Vortex for ease of editing and saving presets as well as tempo sync.
so, that's another story, it seems. I was in fact asking.

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Creating and retrieving presets in on a Vortex is not a trivial undertaking.

It causes me shudders of terror to know that somewhere the Vortex is losing all my hard-earned presets in the hands of its actual owner. :shock: :-o :o

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As I haven't powered mine up yet, I'm going to wait and see what the previous owner of mine had his set up to do before I start messing things up. Whilst I'm on the subject, can any UK Vortex users advise me on a suitable PSU ( I have the original US one )?
Coffee please, black, no sugar.

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The original PSU says


220 V AC 50 HZ prim.

9 V AC 1.5 A 13.5 VA secondary

Made by Bartec Germany

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Thanks- I'll see what Maplins have to offer.
Coffee please, black, no sugar.

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The Vortex ROCKS.
It was never very popular here in the U.K. as the build quality was pretty suspect.
It's funny how the vortex and Jam Man were scorned on release by many, but now have Cult status.
I would NEVER part with my vortex and also have an MPX-1 which has some of the Vortex algorithms with the benefit of Reverb and MIDI
control!!!, But it lacks the immediacy of the Vortex which I think is its major strength
I don't have anything against gravity but it really does weigh me down

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