![]() ![]() That allows for the base delay time to be 8 times longer than in Desmodus, allowing the delays to be timed to a particular tempo. Electus uses only 16 or 20 delays (depending on the mode). The main change with Electus was to reduce the number of delays which required changing the structure of the delays. ![]() To increase the delay length the number of delays had to be reduced. Desmodus splits the delay lines so some are in faster memory and some are in slower memory and achieves a delicate balance for RAM performance. ![]() The platform we use, the Daisy Seed, has plenty of memory to make them longer but the majority of the memory is too slow for the number of delay lines in Desmodus (32 delays, up to 128 reads per output sample). Why not make them longer? The answer is a bit tricky. The problem that prevented Desmodus from tempo syncing was simply that the length of the delay lines was too short to match most reasonable tempos. Maybe not exactly what you want to hear but this is from the EV manual: Does anybody know how much is the maximum delay time? ![]()
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