The delay conversion for LFO's (all of them, I think) is just a linear
function ranging from 0s to 4s (roughly) and the echo delay is a linear
function from 0s to 1.5s.
In other words, the formulas are (4 * value/127) and (1.5 * value/127)
respectively.
The other delay values are mapped to exponential ranges (presumably to
allow for varying precision while covering a greater range), and while not
terribly complicated they aren't exactly intuitive.
If possible, I would recommend upgrading your versions to 1.5.x, since this
information is now displayed in tooltip boxes when hovering over &
adjusting the controllers.
2017-11-17 12:37 GMT+01:00 Mikko Olkkonen <molkko@xxxxxxxxx>:
Hello, I refer to discussion below. How the delay values [0..127] are
currently turned into milliseconds? Is there some (hopefully simple)
formula to do the conversion. I am using 1.3.4 and 1.3.8. Thanks for any
insight.
regards, Mikko
Jon Arnold <jonarnoldsemail@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Just out of curiosity, is there a way tune the delay to BPM number, like
you might see on a guitar pedal or something?
Not at the moment, but we are looking at the way controlvalues are identified,
and this could become a time (possibly in seconds) so if you
have a 0.5 sec
delay that would correspond to 60 / 0.5 i.e. 120BPM
--
Will J Godfrey