Yep, I have a feeling it might be a popular one. If it does what it says, it really fills a niche.adl wrote:Ordered, paypaled...WAITING!!!!
SKnote "ThreeD" - Mono to stereo and stereo enhancement - Available NOW
- KVRAF
- 4801 posts since 1 Aug, 2005 from Warszawa, Poland
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- KVRAF
- 1800 posts since 10 Feb, 2007
Was thinking the same and I'm playing with it right.Zombie Queen wrote:If it does what it says, it really fills a niche.
Guess what? It is a niche filler. This will be heard lots on my mono hihats!
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2432 posts since 15 Jul, 2004 from Italy
Be careful, it can be addictive!
A note for Cubase users (and some more hosts I'm sure):
ThreeD on a mono track doesn't output stereo, because the track is still mono. Add a stereo group, send the mono track to this one, insert ThreeD in the stereo group.
No need in hosts like Reaper, where tracks aren't mono or stereo by nature.
Tip: it can be very useful inserted before a send reverb.
Tip #2: S->S delay works on left channel only. If you insert it in a stereo group containing multitracked extreme panned guitars you should be able to fine tune the sound by delay knob. This is often called "phase alignment" but it "time alignment". Delay is only back in time (bidirectional delay would require adding latency to the system), so reverse the panning if you want to delay the other track.
A note for Cubase users (and some more hosts I'm sure):
ThreeD on a mono track doesn't output stereo, because the track is still mono. Add a stereo group, send the mono track to this one, insert ThreeD in the stereo group.
No need in hosts like Reaper, where tracks aren't mono or stereo by nature.
Tip: it can be very useful inserted before a send reverb.
Tip #2: S->S delay works on left channel only. If you insert it in a stereo group containing multitracked extreme panned guitars you should be able to fine tune the sound by delay knob. This is often called "phase alignment" but it "time alignment". Delay is only back in time (bidirectional delay would require adding latency to the system), so reverse the panning if you want to delay the other track.
- KVRAF
- 4801 posts since 1 Aug, 2005 from Warszawa, Poland
Oh, yes. I can see that. Fortunately I didn't have much time to fiddle with it. But it is super fun and a niche filler indeed. Thanks.quintosardo wrote:Be careful, it can be addictive!
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- KVRAF
- 2973 posts since 10 Sep, 2003 from Karlskoga, Stockholm, Sweden
I find it to be brilliant on hihats! Even if you have a channel with different (electronic/909ish) hihats on it, ThreeD still manages to separate them in a natural way. On synths it can be more subtle (if you want) but that little difference is felt and moves attention from the center out to the sides.
- KVRAF
- 4801 posts since 1 Aug, 2005 from Warszawa, Poland
A friendly bump, for this is a very nice tool, it can put a lot of life into simple synthesizer sounds.
Spread algorithm is the nicest. What I wish for, if I may express it, would be bypass button and (not sure, if it's possible) noiseless knob operation, so you could automate parameters.
Spread algorithm is the nicest. What I wish for, if I may express it, would be bypass button and (not sure, if it's possible) noiseless knob operation, so you could automate parameters.
