Point taken, but speed is irrelevant when you use ‘hold’ (as long as the rate is higher than the trig rate) but in practice i find that you get perfect sample and hold style on super slow lfos anyway (mind you the random step lfo is kinda 16times faster than all other standard shapes), but yeah, good pointer #OTtip[/quote]
Not to be a pedant but the speed does in fact make a difference with HOLD, even if the LFO rate is higher than the trig rate. In effect you create a sort of moire pattern between the steps of the free-running LFO and trigs which hold the value of this LFO. If the values are too nice and round (like 4, 8, 12, 16, etc.) you get predictable patterns with audible repetition.
When you use a fairly ugly number for the rate, it’s sort of like running a 53-step pattern sequencer against a regular 16-step pattern. Repetition will still eventually occur but in context it is much less obvious.[/quote]

:wink:
ok ok you just need to ensure that the variation potential is enhanced by not going too slow, which is exactly what i said in my post, i guess i was ignoring the specific context and commenting on behaviour of lfo and evidently thinking of a random LFO shape which is my default, so yeah, my bad for reading/replying too hastily
i understand what you’re advocating with a pseudo random binary state and that you only create potential for interesting variety by having a high irregular rate - the nice thing about using lfo designer is the ability to vary the duty cycle of the pulse and also to make it unipolar, it’s a good technique to have in the bag, very handy also if you want to play random but scale corrected notes too, which is how i use this technique in nord modular, it has its own random binary object ! Using ‘ramps’ with the designer will also allow you to get unipolar random, being careful to choose an irregular rate, to emphasise your point, thanks for the pedantry :+1: [/quote]
Oh no problem at all man, I just wanted to clarify that, mostly to encourage further experimentation :slight_smile: Sounds like I may have just confused other folks more though, oops…
Yeah, exactly, the LFO designer w/ HOLD is great for scales and things like that, you can use it as a kind of bank/database/array of pseudo-random values. Cool for all sorts of things that you might want to restrict to a specific set of values - pitch, timing, volume, etc.
I love the Nord Modular too… so happy about that Wine patch that came out recently, now I can edit my Micromod in OSX (and Linux)!