ang hindi ko naintindihan sa gawa niya, both delays may input output. ah basta ang labo haha.
definitely, ito sabi nya sa:
"djthomaswhite
When you plug into Input 1 and Output 2 you have a dual delay chain. This means the delay 1 signal in it's entirety feeds delay 2 for taps upon taps. Basically this is done as follows. The unit is two delays right? One in and one out per delay. The out of delay number one feeds the "switching" input jack of delay number two. So what this means is you can patch the unit as two independent delays with one in and one out each just by plugging in to the in and out or each delay. Here's the trick...
The output of delay number one feeds the switching lug of delay #2. The means if nothing is plugged in to delay number two then delay number one is the input to it. So every signal and resulting tap of delay number one gets an additional signal and tap from delay number two. This can mean double taps, double echos, and much more fun. Imagine every 1/4 note tap from delay number one being converted to 1/8th note taps via the second delay. With correct usage of this one can end up with a reverb-like texture to their sound. Albeit more"slapback" in nature it is still reminiscent of reverb.
To make a long story short... how do you do this? Wire the output of delay number one to the switching lug of delay number two. If a plug is plugged in to the input of delay number two, the input overrides any signal from delay number one. If no input is plugged in to delay number two, then delay number one (taos and all) feeds delay number two to get extra taps and all. Hope this helps! Thanks for the compliments on the video!!!
tell me if you figure this out!