

Xhip Reverb is a fantastic reverb which give you a lot more control than you would think for a reverb with just 8 parameters, because it gives you the parameters of Roomsize, Diffusion, Time (Decay feedback/reverb tail length), Delay, Echo, and Dampening. Christian Budde, however, is a fantastic developer (and a very generous one as well), and knows what he is doing, and the quality of posihfopit and Electri-Q and their syzygy, E-Q(PE), reflects this. *In the digital realm, usually when a plug-in or digital hardware unit claims to emulate anything at the transistor level, it is marketing bullshit and means not much more than that the plug follows a vaguely similar signal path. Double-click, and you get the option to adjust exact values of frequency (to the hundreth fo a hertz), gain (to the thousandth of a decibel), and Q, or bandwidth (to thousandths of what appear to be E-Q(PE)'s own units).

Right-click, and you are availed to E-Q(PE)'s 44 (as in forty-fucking-four) different types of filters. The difference when cutting or EQ-ing lower frequencies is typically negligible. It also has an "economy mode" which compromises less CPU for sound quality - to be honest, though, the only time I can tell the difference is when using steep peaks on the high end. It has two modes: "analog" which is modeled after vintage transistor-based EQs*, and therefore applies more saturation as you push and pull, and digital mode, for clean, transparent equalization. The result, by academic description, fucking kicks all fucking kinds of fucking ass.Į-Q(PE) has up to 64 bands, but you create them as you go, meaning that, unlike many poorly designed EQs, you aren't wasting CPU on bands that you aren't using (mostly a fault of first gen VSTs, as most newer EQs bypass in-active filters). Try googling it.įor a while, internet residents and visitors often said how Posihfopit and electri-q were some of the best EQ's around, so Christian Budde decided to combine the twos' sound and utility. It is very much like driving a signal into a tube). However, even though the developer says otherwise, I swear by ears that there is a difference in the compression algorithm (Compression in CC with "phat mode" off is supposed to be identical to CPF except in stereo, but dialing identical values in both on a mono signal bears different results. Camelphatfree is Camelcrusher except CPF is mono and CC has another distortion algorithm.
#Chebyshev soundhack free#
I still rate it as one of the best free plugs out there. Even without the Convolution on, Boogex is a good sounding distortion. If you want you can load reverb IR's into it, but it will cost CPU and be mono. Being that it is primarily made to process short IR's, it utilizes low latency while retaining modest CPU usage. Voxengo Boogex is primarily a amp/cab simulator, combining its own distortion algorithms with impulse-response convolution. a funky-ass filter module with bouncing ball movements. the best free EQ i've found, with digital and analogue modes - i think this is an excellent little plugin. Mykrasound Stereo Echo & Mykrasound Chorus.

may be a little confusing at first but sounds fantastic. made by u-he this is a monstrously cool little comb-filter synth with a unique sound.
