I haven't even watched the video, but thank you none-the-less! This is pretty much the exact setup I'm planning and very specific videos are always incredibly helpful.
That would certainly give you a great deal of capability. For me the next thing is hooking up an Expert Sleepers CVM-8 input module to get 8 more CV inputs to the Nerdseq via I2C. This will allow me to hook up a bunch of other input devices (touchpads, joystick, theremin, etc) to the Nerdseq.
Hello SynthBu, thank you for this video :) at 15:08 you said that one could modify the mapping to adjust the range of the parameter controlled by the fader. I feel dumb but I just can't figure it by my own, I don't find any information about this in the manual. Could you please tell me more about this ? Cheers
Great video! Now I really want one. 😁 Just a tip: It went a bit fast sometimes. For example at 13:25 and a bit forward it’s hard to hear what you’re saying. Otherwise: 👍👍👍👍👍👍 I subscribed.
The funny thing is that I had first uploaded a video that was sped up much more. I realized it was too fast so I created this slowed down version. Still, this one is still too fast. I'm just learning here. Thanks for the feedback.
That was very useful 👍 sorry if the answer of this question is obvious but if the faders are configurated for I2C, can you still use them with cables directly to other modules than the Nerdseq?
Great question. Turns out the faders still supply CV ouput when connected to the Nerseq via I2C. You can even have the output from a single fader go both to the Nerdseq and to another device via the CV output. Provides all sorts of flexibility.
I haven't even watched the video, but thank you none-the-less! This is pretty much the exact setup I'm planning and very specific videos are always incredibly helpful.
much demystified, thank you!
nice! if only the multi IO expander wasn't that expensive - which leaves me with the 80s experience of operating the NerdSeq - which is also great :D
So helpful - thank you
This is so cool! I've been thinking getting into i2c for my er301 and nerdseq, but haven't done it yet
That would certainly give you a great deal of capability. For me the next thing is hooking up an Expert Sleepers CVM-8 input module to get 8 more CV inputs to the Nerdseq via I2C. This will allow me to hook up a bunch of other input devices (touchpads, joystick, theremin, etc) to the Nerdseq.
Hello SynthBu, thank you for this video :)
at 15:08 you said that one could modify the mapping to adjust the range of the parameter controlled by the fader.
I feel dumb but I just can't figure it by my own, I don't find any information about this in the manual. Could you please tell me more about this ?
Cheers
Great video! Now I really want one. 😁
Just a tip: It went a bit fast sometimes. For example at 13:25 and a bit forward it’s hard to hear what you’re saying.
Otherwise: 👍👍👍👍👍👍
I subscribed.
The funny thing is that I had first uploaded a video that was sped up much more. I realized it was too fast so I created this slowed down version. Still, this one is still too fast. I'm just learning here. Thanks for the feedback.
That was very useful 👍 sorry if the answer of this question is obvious but if the faders are configurated for I2C, can you still use them with cables directly to other modules than the Nerdseq?
Great question. Turns out the faders still supply CV ouput when connected to the Nerseq via I2C. You can even have the output from a single fader go both to the Nerdseq and to another device via the CV output. Provides all sorts of flexibility.
@@SynthButhanks so much for your answer. That’s really great news!
Now that you have Euclidian rhythms, you can bring this down to Bhangra & Beats!