Hey guys;
I've been using the Glitchee for a while now and purely loving it. Today a friend came by and noticed something I hadn't noticed so far:
The Low and Sub (specially the second) tend disappear when the input signal is not strong enough. When playing more softly and using the octaves in more pronounced settings this becomes a true issue. Using a booster before Glitchee's Input improves this significantly. I don't understand well how the CD4024 works but I was wondering if there's a way to increase the signal being sent to the octave part of the circuit. Maybe lowering R5 would do the trick?
I mean, the pedal is absolutely fantastic, my favorite among all the 80+ pedals I've built so far in my lifetime. If I could calibrate the input sensitivity to the octave part of the circuit it'd be perfect for pick-less soft players like myself :))
I've been using the Glitchee for a while now and purely loving it. Today a friend came by and noticed something I hadn't noticed so far:
The Low and Sub (specially the second) tend disappear when the input signal is not strong enough. When playing more softly and using the octaves in more pronounced settings this becomes a true issue. Using a booster before Glitchee's Input improves this significantly. I don't understand well how the CD4024 works but I was wondering if there's a way to increase the signal being sent to the octave part of the circuit. Maybe lowering R5 would do the trick?
I mean, the pedal is absolutely fantastic, my favorite among all the 80+ pedals I've built so far in my lifetime. If I could calibrate the input sensitivity to the octave part of the circuit it'd be perfect for pick-less soft players like myself :))