well, I still find a sine-LFO a must have. However, I haven't yet found a way to introduce this option without breaking the current GUI concept (*).
Cheers,
LiteOn
*: And god knows how long I was staring at the gui on my iPad today's afternoon ...
one way to add more waveform choices to the LFO is to make the on/off toggle button more than 2 states of operation.. so you press it and it toggles through the waveforms and one of the slots could be 'off'LiteOn wrote:Hi Andy,
well, I still find a sine-LFO a must have. However, I haven't yet found a way to introduce this option without breaking the current GUI concept (*).
Cheers,
LiteOn
*: And god knows how long I was staring at the gui on my iPad today's afternoon ...
Objection!dayjob wrote: one way to add more waveform choices to the LFO is to make the on/off toggle button more than 2 states of operation.. so you press it and it toggles through the waveforms and one of the slots could be 'off'
dayjob wrote: the problem is this then effects the idea of automating the lfo on/off state.. since then you'd be automating LFO waveform and on/off once you toggled through.. but it would add for far more LFO waveform choices.
yeah i was just thinking off the top of my head..but i think splitting the on off toggle into two switches.. one that is on off w/same functionality as is current and the other being a toggle to toggle through various waveform shapes could work.. but as we both said.. this would effect the waveform morphing feature in some way.. which is a feature i like and is integral to the plug in...LiteOn wrote:Objection!dayjob wrote: one way to add more waveform choices to the LFO is to make the on/off toggle button more than 2 states of operation.. so you press it and it toggles through the waveforms and one of the slots could be 'off'
Because ofdayjob wrote: the problem is this then effects the idea of automating the lfo on/off state.. since then you'd be automating LFO waveform and on/off once you toggled through.. but it would add for far more LFO waveform choices.
Plus, it would break one of the core concepts of the gui. The blue on/off-toggles should remain, erm, on/off-toggles. They provide easy visual orientiation on what section is activated or not.
Maybe just a switch which makes the triangle a sine without breaking the LFO wave morphing. But that would mean, sine and triangle are mutually exclusive - nope, that's a bad idea either.
Cheers,
LiteOn
I'm completely with you. Great plugin.dayjob wrote:...and throw all these ideas into some kind of GUI cluster f**k and see what shakes out .. then makes it OK for us all to discuss.. which i'm sure results in some facepalming on andy's partfor same reason i stated above.. this gui is beautiful and makes the plug in a joy to use (and of course it sounds the awesome)
yes for simple left click + pop up menu to select filter type! don't really feel the need to have a knob for this.I completely agree here, in fact not even a right click, I meant to add a left click of the name of the filter circuit to popup a list.Funkybot's Evil Twin wrote: A right+click menu would also be helpful for selecting filter type. This would be in addition to the knob that's currently used. It would be great for jumping from one type to another for quick A/B'ing of how a given filter's tone effects the audio.
i wonder if when all the filter types are in there the knob will make for nice automation of filter types that would some how be different w/o the knob?sqigls wrote:yes, i think the knob for changing filter type is strange.
...maybe a virtual synth that can also incorporate The Drop (an all in one unit) if you like :@)4ppleseed wrote:Would love a vintage modelled EQ from you next - somthing like the Waves V-Series but with a switch to select from the different classic EQs across the years
Andy already alluded to next up being a modelled EQ of some kind, followed by a compressor, then a synth. I'll be buying them all!4ppleseed wrote:Would love a vintage modelled EQ from you next - somthing like the Waves V-Series but with a switch to select from the different classic EQs across the years
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