⚫
Press ENTER.
⚫
The display will read “Move nn To Max.” “nn” will be replaced by the CC number of the pedal.
⚫
Move the pedal to its maximum position.
⚫
Press ENTER.
⚫
Turn the knob to the desired function that you want to assign to this pedal.
⚫
Press ENTER.
CC De-jitter
Some MIDI controllers produce extraneous CC messages that vary slightly each message. Specifically,
this has been seen with some MIDI controllers that take expression pedal inputs. This can cause the
LP1 to keep displaying the new volume or feedback setting on the display. This will interfere with
menu operation on the LP1. To handle this, there is a main menu item “CC de-jitter”. You can use this
menu item to increase the number to instruct the LP1 to ignore CC changes unless they are greater than
the number chosen. Many controllers work fine with this setting at 0. However, we have seen at least
one controller that requires this number to be set to 2 to avoid spurious display changes.
MIDI or USER Button Configuration
The LP1 can accept MIDI program change messages, MIDI continuous controller messages, or MIDI
note messages to activate a variety of functions. To program a button on a MIDI controller, follow the
following procedure:
⚫
Press the MENU button until the main menu is selected. The main menu says “Looperlative LP1”
on the top line of the display.
⚫
Turn the knob until the second line of the display reads “MIDI/USER btn.”
⚫
Press ENTER.
⚫
The display will read “Press button.”
⚫
Press the MIDI button or USER button that the LP1 will respond to.
⚫
The display will indicate which button you selected.
⚫
Turn the knob to change the LP1 function on the second line of the display. This is the function that
will be assigned to the selected button.
⚫
Press ENTER to accept the selection.
The MIDI configuration is remembered when the unit is powered off.
Advanced MIDI or User Button Configuration
Each button can perform up to 8 different functions in order with a single button press. When using the
above procedure to assign functions to each button, you are actually assigning a sequence of functions
to each button. In the above procedure, you only assign the first step in each sequence.
To assign additional functions in the sequence, you use the track selection buttons to select the
sequence position that you want to assign. For example, to assign the second step, press the track 2
button.
EXAMPLE: Assigning the USER 4 button to reverse and half-speed