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Spring reverb
Available settings
Before introducing you the various settings, we need to make a little reminder!
the dry signal is the signal that enters into the pedal without any modifications.
the wet signal is the one that has been processed by the effect, hence the output, in a classic pedal.
these terms are often used when it comes to parallel sound processing.
because, we want to keep the dry signal and then, add a dose of wet signal to it, according to our taste.
mix, a pot that set the dry/wet ratio of the signal. primordial for dosing the amount of reverb.
at min, there is no more reverb (100% dry, 0% wet) and at max,
we only have reverb (0% dry, 100% wet).
out, a pot that set volume of the wet branch only. at min, there is no more reverb and at max,
the reverb gains about +9db. +18db in spring saturation mode.
low, a pot playing on the 2 band active eq, precisely on low frequency side.
at min, we remove completely the basses, at max, we gain +6db.
this is very useful when you want to make big layers or just a tiny reverb on the back of the mix.
high, is the same setting but for the trebles.
spring saturation, a switch to put springs in saturation mode! when switched up,
the spring is intact, the signal passes normally through. when switched down,
the spring saturates and the output level increases significantly, you get a kind of
fuzz/overdrive that comes from the spring! pretty unique, right?