2 m.207 effects, 1 the fxglide™ area, 1 the slider strip – Stanton M.207 User Manual

Page 12: 2 the button strip, 3 the led strip

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M.207 Effects

4.2

M.207 Effects

In this section of the manual, we will show you how to use the main M.207 effects – from the Auto Filter to the Transform effect.
Let’s get ready to tweak!

4.2.1

The FXglide™ Area

This is the main control for the effects in the M.207 and it is separated into 3 components – the Slider Strip (A),
the Button Strip (B), and the LED Strip (C). (Figure 4.2)

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4.2.1.1 The Slider Strip

The Slider Strip (A) is like a virtual fader that moves up and down with your finger and it is used to change a parameter that is a
continuous range of values (like 1-100, or 20 Hz to 20 kHz). The Slider Strip is absolute, meaning that if a range from 0-100 is being
controlled, 0 is always the bottom and 100 is always the top. Touching a specific point on the slider results in a specific value being
generated.

4.2.1.2 The Button Strip

The Button Strip (B) is a vertically aligned row of 5 buttons. These buttons have different uses depending on which effect is selected,
but in all cases, the values go from top (greatest) to bottom (least). Buttons are generally used to choose things like beat divisions
(4/1, 2/1, 1/1, ½ for instance), or to trigger samples.

4.2.1.3 The LED Strip

The LED Strip (C) is a column of LEDs that gives visual feedback on the different FXGlide™ functions and effects parameters.
For instance, with the PHASER effect selected, it will tell you which beat division is currently selected. If automation is active, it will
give you a visual representation of that particular automation. The LED Strip it is not touch sensitive.

Figure 4.2

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