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Tim Goodwin wrote : > I think the actual beginning and end points of the WAV file are a direct > function of when record is pressed (which would explain variations in > length). But the track length is also a function of LPA which >incorporates > the selected or sync'd tempo to calculate trim points which blend the >start > and stop points into a more 'musical/user-friendly loop'. > > As soon as the recording is ended, the playback that we hear is an >altered > WAV file - not the true WAV file length. It doesn't seem to be possible >to > listen to the actual non-LPA'd WAV on the Repeater, even when I tweak the > trim and trim cut functions. It wasn't until I started messing around >with > the WAVs on my PC that I noticed how much different they sound than what >I > could monitor on the Repeater. There is a gap at the end of each WAV >that > breaks up the continuity of the loop when played back in ACID Xpress and > n-Track. > > -- > Tim let's admit it's true for a first track once recorded, but what about the 3 other tracks then ? I mean do you know if start/end loop points of the 3 other tracks are trimmable like the first track once recorded ? Or do the start/end points or the 3 other tracks are definitively fixed according to the LPA ? Is it truely a quadriphonic loop, or a 4-independent loop track ? EP