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Any way to *instantly* bypass / un-bypass a VST plugin?

I need help on a Patch
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beammy
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Unread post by beammy » 01 Jan 2014, 06:19

I've just started having a play around with Usine, and I love how powerful and flexible it is.

One problem that I'm encountering, though, is that when you switch a VST plugin between "bypassed" and "not bypassed", say by patching a switch into its "bypass" input, there's about a quarter-second delay before a change to this takes effect. Is there any way around this?

I really do need to deactivate the VST itself, to save CPU usage - simply routing the audio past the VST wouldn't be a workable solution.

Thanks!

hesspet
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Unread post by hesspet » 01 Jan 2014, 22:25

Build you "own" bypass.

Route the signal around your VST.

The patch of a VST created by Usine

Image

and here's one possible solution:

Image

There are many other ways to do so. (eg. put a fader in front of the vst and set the fader only 0 & 100%)

This solution is fast. Disadvantage: the vst is not stopped and sucks CPU performance during the bypass time.
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+++ DIY electronics +++ musical experiments +++ light experiments +++

woodslanding
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Unread post by woodslanding » 01 Jan 2014, 23:58

In the example above, you can wire 'my bypass' to the bypass of the vst and get the cpu savings and the bypass all with one button.

For me, I put the vst in a subpatch and use a patch on/off module instead of bypass. I think some vsts still use cpu when bypassed (not sure....)

-e
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Usine, Kontakt, Reaktor, Synthmaster, Byome, Arturia, Soundtoys, Unify

hesspet
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Unread post by hesspet » 02 Jan 2014, 00:10

Yes, it depends on the VST.
There is no rule!
+++ journeytounknownsoundscapes.blogspot.de +++
+++ DIY electronics +++ musical experiments +++ light experiments +++

beammy
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Unread post by beammy » 05 Jan 2014, 10:54

Thanks for the replies! It turns out that most VSTs actually do bypass virtually instantly - the one I was testing just had a slight delay. Silly - I should have tested more.

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