The CMT LADSPA delays have no feedback. Sent using BlackBerry® from Orange -----Original Message----- From: Patrick Shirkey <pshirkey@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sender: linux-audio-user-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Date: Mon, 04 Apr 2011 15:55:02 To: <linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: Need to create delay or artificial latency On 04/04/2011 03:09 PM, David Adler wrote: > On Mon, Apr 4, 2011 at 4:18 AM, Patrick Shirkey wrote: > >> On 04/04/2011 12:12 PM, Paul Davis wrote: >> >>> On Sun, Apr 3, 2011 at 9:57 PM, Daniel Bair wrote: >>> >>>> I have two different sized delays that I need to create. >>>> 1.) I need a audio delay of no more than 4 seconds. All of the delay >>>> plugins >>>> for Jack-Rack create echo. I just need a pure delay or artificial latency >>>> inserted into the jack audio stream (the output needs to be delayed 4 >>>> seconds from the input without mixing back the input). >>>> >>> just change the dry/wet mix to 100% wet and you'll get what you want. >>> >> Not quite. It depends on the amount of feedback too. >> > Or use puredata, an example patch is attached. > > >>>> 2.) I need a timezone delay of no more than 4 hours. (there are no >>>> plugins >>>> for Jack-Rack that do this and my attempt to create one with csladspa >>>> doesn't work... I have plenty of hd space for looped storage.) >>>> >>>> >>> more details on the use case would be appropriate. it may not be that >>> a delay in the conventional sense is the right answer. or it could be. >>> no way to tell. >>> >>> >> I think hk.e is wanting to buffer for upto 4 hours... Either that or record >> something and then play it back up to 4 hours later. Sounds like a very >> unconventional tool so would probably be best to create it with PD or build >> the app from scratch. However it may be that "timemachine" does what he is >> looking for. >> >> > No. Timemachine just records audio. > I cannot help here. > > (14400000 ms in [delwrite~] is too much for puredata - > I was just curious. Anyhow, these objects use ram, not > the disc.) > So puredata can't buffer 4 hours of data? Is that a limitation of the available memory or the internal format or what? Ardour can records for at least 10 hours non stop. Maybe ecasound is a better tool for this procedure? -- Patrick Shirkey Boost Hardware Ltd. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user