Didn't know that it was Überwaves in Nave.Ingonator wrote:This is alraedy possible with e.g. the "Übermod" feature in Waldorf Nave (could be used with Saw, Triangle, Square, variable Pulse and/or PWM and also with Noise), some of the the Ultrasaw modes in Electra 2.1 (e.g. "Hypersquare", "6x Pulse", "Hypernoise") and also with DUNE 2 (actually DUNE 2 could use the "Supersaw" feature with all waveforms including wavetables).D-Fusion wrote:This one also have Supersquare and super sine + supertrianglefluffy_little_something wrote:SuperSaw, HyperSaw, gee, I wonder what's next? It's absurd...
Anyway the terms "Supersaw" and "Hypersaw" seem to be specific implementations by Roland (e.g. JP-8000) and Access Music (e.g. Virus TI) and it would be correct to use those terms for those or emulations of them (for example Electra 2.1 contaisn emulations of both). The actual Hypersaw and Supersaw have a specific sound to them and are not just the same word for the same thing (nd teh actual Spersaw is limited to using up to 7 detuned Saws while Hypersaw is available with different amounts from 2 up to 9).
For other implementations taht are no specific emulation a term like e.g. "Multisaw" or "Ultrasaw" (or "Überwave" like in Nave) would be maybe better or more precise (and is already used in some plugins).
FWIW i also do not think that a typical Unison is a proper replacement for the actual Supersaw and Hypersaw, both in terms of sound and CPU use (the dedicated Spersaw and HYpersaw usually do not have a higher CPU use than other standard waveforms, opposing to an actual Unison).
Just a few thoughts...
Ingo
How are they compared to the real deal (Supersaw)?
