Modulation Processors
65
Scale
This processor uses a modulation source to scale the input. For instance, you can control the amount of an LFO with
an Envelope, or control the amount of an Envelope with a MIDI controller.
Input
[List of Modulation Sources]
This selects the main input for the Mod Processor.
Main Input Amount
[–100%…+100%]
This controls the gain and polarity of the input signal,
before being scaled by the
Scale Source
. Input from the
Scale Source
then adds to this initial amount.
Even if the
Main Input Amount
is set to
0
, the
Scale Source
can still control the final amount of the Main Input over the
full +/–100 range.
Scale Source
[List of Modulation Sources]
This selects the modulation source to scale the
Input
.
Scale Amount
[–100%…+100%]
This controls the gain and polarity of the affect of the
Scale Source
. For example, the main input is an LFO and the
Scale Source
is an Envelope, positive settings mean that the Envelope will increase the amount the of LFO.
Curve
Curve can create custom controller curves, such as exponential joystick, logarithmic velocity, and so on. It can also
alter the shape of programmable modulation sources, such as Envelopes and LFOs.
Note:
Curve primarily affects modulation signals which already have some amount of slope, such as envelopes, triangle
and sine LFOs, and so on. If the signal has only abrupt transitions from one value to another, like a classic sample-and-
hold waveform, Curve will affect the values, but not the transitions between them. Curve does not affect signals which
contain only maximum, 0, or minimum values, such as square waves.
Input
[List of Modulation Sources]
This selects the input for the Mod Processor.
Input = LFO
Scale Source = Env
Output