Fx: patch – Muse Research Receptor manual v1.2 User Manual

Page 53

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5: View Buttons in Depth

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Receptor Manual

2

Rotate the bottom display knob to select the bank you wish to load.
The bank name is flashing

3

Press the bottom display knob.
Receptor shows you the first patch in that bank.

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4

Rotate the bottom display knob to select a patch. The patch name will flash.

5 Press the bottom display knob to load that patch into Receptor.

NOTE 1: You cannot select a bank without also selecting a patch, since a Bank is nothing more than a directory
of patches.
NOTE 2: ROM bank names are enclosed in angle brackets, like <this>. When you see a bank name enclosed
in <angle brackets>, it means the bank is a “factory” bank and cannot be overwritten or deleted. For more
information, see “ROM Banks and RAM Banks” on page 127.

FX: Patch

If you want to select a patch from the current bank, rotate the top display knob to select the

Patch

parameter. If

you want to select a patch from a different bank, it will be fastest to use the Bank parameter discussed above.

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Rotate the bottom display knob to select the patch you wish to load. The patch name is flashing, indicating you
must press the bottom display knob to actually load the selected patch.
If you’re currently viewing the last patch in a bank, and you turn the bottom display knob another notch
clockwise, Receptor will automatically switch to the next bank and display the first patch within that bank. The
same is true if you’re viewing the first patch in a bank and turn the bottom display knob counter-clockwise.
Essentially, you can scroll through every patch without using the Bank parameter at all! However, with over 2
million patch locations available, we’re quite certain that you’ll want to make use of the Bank parameter.
NOTE 1: Patches for some plugins, particularly those that must load samples from hard disk or are very
complex, may take longer to load than others (such as simple algorithmic effect or synth patches).
NOTE 2: ROM patch names are enclosed in angle brackets, like <this>. When you see a patch name enclosed
in <angle brackets>, it means the patch is a “factory” patch and cannot be overwritten or deleted. For more
information, see “ROM Banks and RAM Banks” on page 127.
NOTE 3: If you have edited a patch in any way, an asterisk (*) replaces the colon (:) between the patch number
and name. When you see an asterisk between the patch number and name, you’ll know that the version currently
in the edit buffer is not what’s stored to disk.

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If you want to save your patch, press the SAVE /FILE button to save your edits (as described in “SAVE/FILE
Button” on page 75).

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