This is in fact expected behaviour. Pre-Delay sets how long the delay is between the source sound sounding and the reverb tail sounding. So at 0ms pre-delay, you‘ll here the reverb tail as soon as the source makes a sound. If you now set the reverb to 100% wet (all reverb tail, no source) then you‘ll only here the tail which basically emulates what you would hear if you were to pick up a sound that is coming from a far distance. IRL the closer you are to the source, the more pronounced the source sound will be over the reverb tail (because the sound waves from the instrument will hit your ears before the reverberations from the room will). So by setting a pre-delay of 30-50ms, you‘re basically programming the reverb to give you the source sound first and have the sound of the reverb follow with a 30-50ms delay…so that would give you a sound we would perceive as coming from closer to us than a source where its sound and its reverb tail blend faster, thereby placing it more prominently/in the foreground of a mix.
EDIT: so your two main variables for placement of sounds in the mix via reverb are
- pre-delay (increase = closer to listener, decrease = farther away) and
- reverb dry/wet - that‘s the reverb send level which you programme in your track/sound directly (wetter = more reverb less signal = farther away, drier = less reverb more signal = closer to listener).
Note that total volume of the track also affects placement (louder = closer, quieter = farther away). And panning can also create a certain feel.
Frequency filtering/boosting also has an affect on placement. Low frequencies travel slower but farther than high frequencies…so if you want something to be perceived as farther away, you‘d cut the higher frequencies to effect. With the reverb, you gotta be careful here though, if you boost low frequency reverberations you could quickly end up with a muddy mix. So you might be well advised to cut higher frequencies at your source sound to place it farther in the back.
Note - this is just my understanding, I might be wrong / missing something.
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