i think it's definitely worth mentioning. turning the feedback all the way up usually behaves on digital pedals, where you get clean equal repeats indefinitely. if the pedal emulates analog or tape delay it might degrade the repeats and go silent after a while. and in the case of true analog delay the feedback actually builds upon itself and starts distorting and entering the kind of oscillation you showed here. correct me if i'm wrong. all in all i think the behavior of the pedal at the limits of the range of each knob is informative.
Thank you for making this video! I was looking for affordable pedals, and I found this one, and I watched your video for research. It really helped my decision. Keep up the epic content.
Thanks! As usual I ordered the pedal without researching it. I just literally got an email as I type this saying it showed up at my door. I subscribed and liked! Keep those videos coming!
Question of the Day:
Is self-oscillation worth mentioning on delay pedals? Is it worth demonstrating or is a quick note enough?
i think it's definitely worth mentioning.
turning the feedback all the way up usually behaves on digital pedals, where you get clean equal repeats indefinitely. if the pedal emulates analog or tape delay it might degrade the repeats and go silent after a while. and in the case of true analog delay the feedback actually builds upon itself and starts distorting and entering the kind of oscillation you showed here. correct me if i'm wrong.
all in all i think the behavior of the pedal at the limits of the range of each knob is informative.
Thank you for making this video! I was looking for affordable pedals, and I found this one, and I watched your video for research. It really helped my decision. Keep up the epic content.
Thanks! As usual I ordered the pedal without researching it. I just literally got an email as I type this saying it showed up at my door. I subscribed and liked! Keep those videos coming!
Haha. I tend to research and watch a "couple" videos.