On Sun, 29 Jan 2017 02:41:50 -0500 termtech <termtech@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Saturday, January 28, 2017 2:37:40 PM EST Len Ovens wrote: > > On Sat, 28 Jan 2017, Will Godfrey wrote: > > > My nice new BFC2000 was delivered yesterday, and I'm very pleased with it. > > > It has an astonishing range of configuration possibilites, and unlike > > > many units is reasonably quick and easy to program from the unit itself. > > > > Good to know. > > > > > The faders can be ordinary CCs, specifically pitch bend or any NRPN. The > > > NRPNs can be full 14 bit data or 7 bit and can be absolute or > > > incremental. > > I knew the encoders could be incremental, but faders is a new one on me. > > > > > I can't confirm the resolution of either the pitch bend or NRPN modes, but > > > it is greater than the accuracy of the sliders themselves - when used as > > > an NRPN and steadily moving the slider up, a fractional movement can > > > actually send a slightly lower value - which suggests it's reading > > > discontinuites in the carbon track. > > > > That could very well be why Mackie limited their faders to 10 bits (last 4 > > bits zeroed). > > I am interested to know /how/ it sends out the 14 bits. > Hi byte first? Or low byte? Or selectable? > And can it optimize by not sending redundant hi or low bytes, > or redundant NRPN numbers? It seems to play safe and always send Nhigh, Nlow, Dhigh, Dlow although I haven't investigated all the settings. I'm a bit lazy. Once I've got what I want I tend to lose interest and stop investigating. > Possibly the problem Will is seeing is a 'glitch' upon the discontinuity > when the hi byte increments to a new value and the low byte > 'rolls over' to a new value. Nope, I was logging the values. I'm talking about extremely small values here. Dlow 33 then 27 then 33 again comes to mind. Seeing odd number values caught my attention. > What are you feeding it into? cout << "Control " << int(ctrl) << " Value " << int(val) << endl; :¬) > I question whether such a new professional product would have > touchy carbon like that, where it goes 'backward' slightly in spots. > (If it uses carbon at all.) It's posible I was actually seeing mechanical backlash as I was making *very* slow, tiny movements. Bear in mind that full range is 100mm. 100 / 16383 * (33-27) = 0.037mm Now if you'll excuse me, my next task is to work out how to MIDI-learn NRPNs (already got 14 bit pitch bend done) :p -- Will J Godfrey http://www.musically.me.uk Say you have a poem and I have a tune. Exchange them and we can both have a poem, a tune, and a song. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user