You are part of my new favourite band mystery. I literally recognized seeing you on a live vid. Crazy. I am bashing another day up and down since a month. crazy antoine
Excellent AM and hey kids: now you have the answer to that question you asked your math teacher. Looking forward to more Antoine; thanks very much indeed! BTW: hoping for more of your insights on controlling stacked delays with the volume pedal. Cheers and until next time, "Au revoir"!
For the volante it always confuses me in regards tp the head numbers... the DIG golden and silver, what would that be on volante (w its spacing setting to silver and gold), head 2 and 4? Head 3 and 4?
are you doing anything to preserve the clean tone of your guitar? I have El Capistan and anytime I turn mix knob even above 30% it really seems to mask the clean/dry tone from my guitar.
The same principles apply with VST. Simply load 2 delay plugins, calculate the BPMs according to the formula, and input the right tempo on each plugin.
Yes, I believe the pedal I showed at the beginning (Strymon DIG) can do that with the Golden Ratio setting selected. Of course, it goes without saying that it needs to be a dual delay pedal that offers 2 independent delays at the same time.
Hi Antoine and the rest, a bit of off topic but some years ago I bought Mission Engineering VM-Pro volume pedal because I saw it in this channel and liked it. It was completely new and was functioning fine but then started crackling, cutting off the signal and make noise. Something with the pot. I bought the contact cleaner and tried to spray. It didn’t help. I checked inside and discovered that the potentiometer is in the plastic casing. Is there a way to clean it and fix it? So annoying, I stopped playing music because of that. Here is the sample I have recorded ruclips.net/video/iJJyF5pgSfY/видео.htmlsi=qBIBElJRPGqAIlvO
Oh, that's bad! I think you should contact them and send them this video. Happened to me just one time in the past 7 years that I got some small crackling noises, and the contact cleaner solved it for me. There's probably more to it.
Golden ratio ftw. I'm very used to see it being the topic of mathematics videos in my feed, but rarely is it the premise in another niche. Love it
Outstanding results, explanation, and demo. Thanks for sharing this!
You are part of my new favourite band mystery. I literally recognized seeing you on a live vid. Crazy. I am bashing another day up and down since a month. crazy antoine
So cool! I was messing with these ratios last night and woke up to an email about this video so I had to watch!
Awesome! What a coincidence!
this is very useful experimentations to create stellar soudscape
Truly Awesome ... very inspiring to.
Excellent AM and hey kids: now you have the answer to that question you asked your math teacher. Looking forward to more Antoine; thanks very much indeed! BTW: hoping for more of your insights on controlling stacked delays with the volume pedal. Cheers and until next time, "Au revoir"!
Going to try this out. Thanks man. 😊
God damn, bro showing even the math formula 🙌🏻 Amazing content!
MAD. GENIUS. MAD GENIUS!¡!¡!
Nice mate
For the volante it always confuses me in regards tp the head numbers... the DIG golden and silver, what would that be on volante (w its spacing setting to silver and gold), head 2 and 4? Head 3 and 4?
are you doing anything to preserve the clean tone of your guitar? I have El Capistan and anytime I turn mix knob even above 30% it really seems to mask the clean/dry tone from my guitar.
hello great sound ,how can I recreate with vst
The same principles apply with VST. Simply load 2 delay plugins, calculate the BPMs according to the formula, and input the right tempo on each plugin.
Is there a pedal that can add delays at the golden ratio based on the tap tempo?
Yes, I believe the pedal I showed at the beginning (Strymon DIG) can do that with the Golden Ratio setting selected. Of course, it goes without saying that it needs to be a dual delay pedal that offers 2 independent delays at the same time.
Hi Antoine and the rest, a bit of off topic but some years ago I bought Mission Engineering VM-Pro volume pedal because I saw it in this channel and liked it. It was completely new and was functioning fine but then started crackling, cutting off the signal and make noise. Something with the pot. I bought the contact cleaner and tried to spray. It didn’t help. I checked inside and discovered that the potentiometer is in the plastic casing. Is there a way to clean it and fix it? So annoying, I stopped playing music because of that.
Here is the sample I have recorded ruclips.net/video/iJJyF5pgSfY/видео.htmlsi=qBIBElJRPGqAIlvO
Oh, that's bad! I think you should contact them and send them this video. Happened to me just one time in the past 7 years that I got some small crackling noises, and the contact cleaner solved it for me. There's probably more to it.