I just mean negative one
When you are at 1 the effect is fully invoked, then you can dampen effect by turning the dial anticlockwise. Lover that 0 you subtract effect
Your question made me realize that we have botched the label, It should be D/W :P
I just mean negative one
If it was D|W it would make sense... W/D implies amount of wet per dry. Pulling it to -1 means negative wet for the constant amount of dry. Pulling it to 0 means no wet for constant amount of dry. Pulling it to +1 means positive wet for constant amount of dry.
I like WET only 👍Monospace wrote: ↑Thu May 27, 2021 4:05 amIf it was D|W it would make sense... W/D implies amount of wet per dry. Pulling it to -1 means negative wet for the constant amount of dry. Pulling it to 0 means no wet for constant amount of dry. Pulling it to +1 means positive wet for constant amount of dry.
If it was D/W, then pulling it to 0 should give you 0 dry 0 wet (or maybe equal dry and wet), right? 0 would mean nothing there.
The D of W/D isn't the 'dry side,' it's the denominator in the ratio of wet to dry.
Using D/W would not only be mathematically wrong, it would raise ambiguity about what 0 means.
An alternative, like I said, is replacing W/D with only WET, and 0 would mean 0 wet, 1 means 1 wet, -1 means subtracted wet. This essentially means the same thing as W/D logically but without the added confusion from the "/D".