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Re: Pitch transposer for retuning?
I owned once a dhp33 and had a dhp55 and also a Evetide DSP4000 at that
time for testing, so I could compare. Today I own a digitech TSR24S. If
you use the algorithm for narrow shifting (don't know its name at the
moment), then all the digitechs have an astonishing quality in pitch
shifting - for sure comparable to the Eventide.
I also remember the DHP-Series to have a very remarkable algorithm for
wider shiftings; this algorithm had the slight disadvantage, that it had
a very short delay, which might disturb the guitar player because the
sound does fit to the feeling in your finger tips. But for sure not
audible for the audience. The TSR24 is not that good in wider shifts.
Florain
james fowler schrieb:
> eventide. detune, retune, any sort of pitchshifting with impressive
>realism.
>
> digitech dhp-33 and -55 both do good jobs as well and cost about
> 1/10th what an eventide will run you.
>
> - jim
>
> On Wednesday, November 25, 2009, van Sinn <vansinn@post.cybercity.dk>
>wrote:
>> Anyone using a programmable pitchtransposer for retuning guitars?
>> Just tried this with my ADA PitchTraq. I used the Effects Out jack
>only, set direct to zero and effects to 100 (full).
>> Setting Cents to -100 gives me an Eb tuning, -200 a D tuning etc..
>> However, the tone is a bit flaky/blurred when used this way.
>>
>> Any devices on the market which can do this?
>> Preferably without too many gadgets, so I won't have to rob a bank ;)
>>
>> --
>> rgds,
>> van Sinn
>>
>>
>
>