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Using MIDI
Your pedal supports USB MIDI (in/out) and 1/4" TRS MIDI (input only). Every parameter (and more) is
fully controllable, allowing you to synchronize the pedal with sequencers, integrate it with your DAW, and
change presets on multiple pedals with one button during a performance. Even if you do not use MIDI
directly, it is the underlying protocol for our web editor and pedalboard controllers.
USB MIDI
Your pedal is a class-compliant USB device, which allows you to:
• Control all parameters
• Access additional hidden parameters
The pedal can work with any USB MIDI host, including:
• Macintosh and Windows computers. The pedal shows up as a MIDI device and is available to all pro-
grams.
• Apple iPad, iPod touch, and iPhone using the Lightning to USB 3 Camera Adapter.
• Standalone USB MIDI hosts allow you to connect the Tensor to hardware with 5-pin DIN MIDI connec-
tors without the use of a computer. Examples include:
iConnectivity iConne
iConnectivity mio4
Disaster Area Designs Gen3 MIDI controllers with their gHOST option
Kenton MIDI USB Host MkII
MidiPlus USB MIDI Host
See our
for up-to-date information
The pedal sends and receives on MIDI channel 1 by default. You can change the MIDI channel using MIDI
System Exclusive messages or our web-based editor. The MIDI channel is remembered when power is
off. See "System Exclusive (SysEx)" on page 36 for more information.
TRS MIDI Input
See "Control Input" on page 22 for information about configuring TRS MIDI. Only MIDI input is support-
ed, so you can use the web editor to change parameters and configuration settings, but it will not show
the current state of the pedal.
Troubleshooting
A utility program that displays MIDI messages can be useful for tracking down MIDI configuration prob-
lems. Examples are MIDI Monitor (Mac OS), MIDI-OX (Windows), and Pocket MIDI (Mac OS and Windows)..
for more troubleshooting information.