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(values are 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,A,B,C,D,E, or F)
you are quoting a heck of a lot there.
[QUOTE]blah blah blah[/QUOTE] to reply to the_taste_of_cigarettes.
Please remove excess text as not to re-post tons
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[QUOTE="the_taste_of_cigarettes:861111"]What it does is either literally take the signal directly past the effect, completely cutting it out, or it brings the effect in like it normally would. No real magic to it, it's all mechanical. The only thing I do differently is that I drop the excess signal to ground when you switch so it's silent and there's no "BOOM" like with, say, a MORLEY A/B. I can do it either with no light, how I prefer it, or with a LED which is a bit more expensive just because the switch costs more and the led + mount costs more. We're looking at like $5 more though, just because the switch is $4 + the LED being $1 for a good one, and then the mount being like $.60. You'd need a battery clip, too, as the LED needs it. Like $1 more to that. It all depends on what features you want. The best way to think of it is that if you had the effect in a case and we'd be adding the last part: the switch. All effects sit together and then have the very last part nearly all the same, called "the wrapper". The standard parts for the wrapper are: -LED -Battery Terminal -Power adapter jack -Switch -Input jack -Output jack These are standard to every foot pedal. With rackmounts they will often have more than one effect and then a bunch of wrappers encased in a box that has multiple switches. With a passive looper, what we do is make it so your signal comes in, then we either pass it to the effect or not. Pretty easy.[/QUOTE]
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