I think I answered the "extended spread" question before. The reason we don't do it is because all unison voices share the same band limiting (anti-aliasing). Hive would consume considerably more CPU if each unison voice needed its own spectrum, or if it had a playback engine which inherently band limits. As a result, extended detune beyond a few semitones will result in aliasing on the voices which are pitched up, and dullness on the voices pitched down.KBSoundSmith wrote: Sun Jun 30, 2019 11:00 pmI think Urs answered part of it regarding the Blend option, but it also seems you want to be able to detune the unison sound more than the default allows, and vary the way they are spread?
Like I said, different manufacturers choose different compromises.
But there's another point to be made. I don't find excessive detune particularly useful - I guess only a handful of presets need it. It certainly isn't a "sweet spot" requirement. By keeping parameter ranges within usable boundaries one gets a higher resolution and thus more control within the region of interest.

