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I had a similar notion with my Digitech RDS 7.6. What I tried to do was scale the delay time of the RDS to the pedals of a Roland PK-5 via a midi/cv converter. Since the RDS has a CV input, I didn't have to alter the circuit. I spent a day or two messing around with this combination. It was fun to play with but it never behaved in a predictable manner. Pedal combinations that produced an octave jump one time would fail at another. My assumption was that the RDS simply behaved differently at various operating temperatures. John --- Daryl <highhorse@mhorse.com> wrote: > > I've realized that the only way I use my Digitech > PDS 2000 is to hold a > phrase, then twist the delay time pot all the way up > or down, giving me > a two-octave pitch jump. I sometimes do this with > other pedals too, > that is, I don't need fine-tuning, just the extreme > settings for a pot. > Generally, or specifically speaking with this pedal, > is it possible to > replace a pot with a switch? If so, how would I > figure out the value of > the switch I'd need? I'm handy with a solder gun, > but awful with math... > > The coolest thing would be if I could add a switch > in addition to the pot. > > thanx. > > Daryl Shawn > highhorse@mhorse.com > ===== John Tidwell __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? New Yahoo! Photos - easier uploading and sharing. http://photos.yahoo.com/