Also, the production of these clips is atrocious. Loud clicks in the editing. The filter aliasing is right off the charts. The last two spectrographs appear to be stereo, which only confuses the issue, while the first one is mono. And what's causing any difference between channels in the stereo spectrographs if all we're listening to is one oscillator and one filter?
Also the Franglais that this page is written in is nearly unintelligible.
This is not impressive at all. Nor is the addition of yet one more old wives' tale into our industry that the rest of us will now have to debunk forever. Thanks!
I just ran the test of a slow cutoff sweep with barely self-oscillating resonance over a static saw wave in Poly-Ana. I don't know if I'm getting the result that you think is appropriate or not, but I know which one sounds better to me. (Guess.)
Here's the Poly-Ana patch if anybody wants to hear it or put it up on a scope/analyzer. Just a single unmodulated saw wave going through a slow triangle modulated filter with resonance just above the self-oscillating range, but below the level that introduces clipping in the resonance (and the resultant aliasing). Oversampling is set to 16X the maximum Quality setting. But try lower Quality/oversampling settings as well, doesn't make that much difference in this case. (If I cranked the resonance right up and/or or the incoming oscillator levels were too high, it would want to alias. In which case higher oversampling would help a lot.)
http://admiralquality.com/products/Poly ... Test01.zip
And here's a Reaper project with Poly-Ana loaded with a GOOD spectrum analyzer (the one in the Xils video is crap) with parameters maxed so you can actually see each harmonic distinctly. Both Reaper and Poly-Ana run as free demos (Poly-Ana will make very short occasional silent gaps) so anyone can try this.
http://admiralquality.com/products/Poly ... roject.zip
Make sure Poly-Ana's hold button is on (just to the right of the keyboard) and play a middle C and let it run through a full sweep (60 seconds). See that little dip in the spectrum analyzer just above the resonant peak? THAT'S what the delay causes. Turn the quality down to the lowest setting (no oversampling) and the dip gets huge.
Here, I'll even take a picture...
Here's the dip with 16X oversampling.

And here it is in roughly the same place, with 4X oversampling.

See how the dip gets bigger and wider the lower the quality setting? THAT'S what 0 delay feedback should eliminate. And that's how you test for it.
You're welcome!

