The other circuits are fairly self-explanatory, with Digital Clip providing the modern counterpart to the Analog Clip circuit, while Medium and Hard Curve deliver somewhat more traditional distortion effects. Soft Sine and Sinoid Fold begin to noticeably diverge at higher Drive settings, where the Sinoid Fold produces some rather artificial sounding transient distortion. ![]() Soft Sine and Sinoid Fold are great for subtly inflating any input with added punch, detail, and harmonic enhancement without even boosting the drive – try using these settings on drums, then enable and disable the device to hear the difference and you might soon wonder how you ever survived without it. A drop-down menu below the waveshaping display provides access to six other circuits: Soft Sine, Medium Curve, Hard Curve, Sinoid Fold, Digital Clip, and Waveshaper. The default circuit selected is Analog Clip, which is perfect for emulating classic mixer gain artifacts. ![]() In the upper left, a Drive dial allows you to adjust the intensity of your selected saturation circuit for more extreme effects, crank it up – but you might then have to compensate with the Output and Dry/Wet controls at bottom right. Pic 1: Ableton Live's Saturator, default view.
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