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julianModerator
Noise isn’t an issue for me.
julianModeratorI’d use it table top. You can do volume swells and bends with the pedal, but if you wanted to swell different voices independently- the expression pedal can’t really handle that.
julianModeratorWell, frozen notes can be filter swept and octaves faded in and out, but only with the sliders. But you can’t do anything with the expression pedal because you’d have to change the expression mode and therefor turn off the freeze (since it’s an expression mode)
julianModeratorYou can any pedal to have an expression pedal.
julianModeratorI think in one of the videos they said something like 1 second or 1.1 seconds or something.
julianModeratorI would think so.
julianModeratorHow about the Ring Thing? It’s smaller and less expensive than the HOG, and I think it does the polyphonic whammy thing.
Also you can go up and down in your sweep instead of just up or just down. It also has presets, so you could save in different sensitivity settings.
The only thing is that out of an expression pedal, I don’t know that you could get quite the same amount of control.
Though there is something called the source audio hot-hand with a hot-hand midi/exp controller, so you’d have a little ring on your finger that you could control the bends with.
A Ring Thing + a Hot Hand + Hot Hand controller would certainly add up, but I think it might be worth a look. I know that stetsbars and bigsbys will add up too.
julianModeratorit’s possible that they use some additional circuitry to step it up to 24v.
julianModeratorQuote:Hmmm. Wonder if that means the Deluxe Memory Man’s msrp will be dropping?Why would it?
Deluxe Memory Man MSRP: $418, street price: $313.50
Deluxe Memory Man Tap Tempo MSRP: $504, estimated street price $378
$65 price difference seems about right.
MSRP is according to Musicradar.com, and the estimated street price is 75% of the MSRP, as almost all EHX products seem to go for about 75% of their MSRP.
Remember, MSRP is Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price. What you have to look at is the MAP or Minimum Advertised Price. That is the lowest price you can advertise the product at. It’s too prevent bigger retailers from driving smaller retailers out of business with price slashing, but it’s pretty much set standard prices on everything.
julianModeratorI read somewhere that the list price is about 500, and the street price is 378 I think.
January 21, 2011 at 4:36 pm in reply to: Electro-Harmonix unveils at NAMM 2011- visit us at Booth# 5396 #113932julianModeratorWell I don’t see square wave on the DMMTT pictures, so that’s one thing the Memory Boy has that it doesn’t. (unless it’s a hidden feature)
I think the point is to be a Deluxe Memory Man in sound quality, but with Deluxe Memory Boy features (for the most part.)
It’ll be easier to compare them when the DMMTT manual comes out, and when some hifi DMMTT demos come out.
They added a page for the DMMTT:
https://www.ehx.com/products/deluxe-memory-man-tap-tempo
it says it uses NOS Panasonic chips.
January 21, 2011 at 1:12 am in reply to: Electro-Harmonix unveils at NAMM 2011- visit us at Booth# 5396 #113912julianModeratorIt wouldn’t be a Man without more expensive chips. Otherwise it’d still be a boy.
January 20, 2011 at 7:57 pm in reply to: Electro-Harmonix unveils at NAMM 2011- visit us at Booth# 5396 #113921julianModeratorMore expensive chips.
January 19, 2011 at 4:33 pm in reply to: Hardware MIDI Step-Sequencers (have disappeared from the face of the Earth) #112842julianModeratorYou could always make a DIY sequencer with an arduino.
I’ve made midi controllers as well as CV sequencers with arduino.
January 18, 2011 at 7:20 pm in reply to: New Voice Box makes loud buzz when connecting along other pedals #113884julianModeratoroh, ok.
And when you plug it in with no other pedals?
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