Does anyone know the limit numbers for adding Sampler, Synthesis & Drum patches?
This is a 2011 post from the old ohpeewon forum (btw, the server is still active, just not published through a DNS):
From TE support:The OP-1 can store the following:
Max Synth Sampler patches = 42
Max Synth Synthesis patches = 100
Max Drum Patches = 42
Ok great, thanks punji!
what’s the ip of the old server?
Edit your “hosts” file (located at C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts on Windows or /private/etc/hosts on Mac) and add the following line at the end:
69.163.224.179 ohpeewon.com
Now try to open the old site in your browser as before, like “http://ohpeewon.com”.
This didn’t work for me on a mac Punji…I wasn’t allowed to modify, I tried saving a copy elsewhere and dropping it in but it didn’t work. I want to believe!
This didn't work for me on a mac Punji...I wasn't allowed to modify, I tried saving a copy elsewhere and dropping it in but it didn't work. I want to believe!
Bad news: the old site is not working anymore (you get an advert page instead).
Is there any way to remove some of the factory presets from the op-1 to make more room?
Sadly no.
You can always nose through the old ohpeewon pages this way…
You can always nose through the old ohpeewon pages this way....https://web.archive.org/web/20120501031635/http://ohpeewon.com/
That’s gonna be really great to look through. I didn’t have a OP-1 back then. Thanks for bringing that up.
Are user synth samples 6 seconds regardless of trim points? Doesn’t seem to be a truncate function and Seems like I can extend ‘end’ point way beyond the end of what I actually recorded on samples which under 6 seconds, which is like 80% of my samples. If so that seems like a pretty weird waste of memory.
Are user synth samples 6 seconds regardless of trim points? Doesn't seem to be a truncate function and Seems like I can extend 'end' point way beyond the end of what I actually recorded on samples which under 6 seconds, which is like 80% of my samples. If so that seems like a pretty weird waste of memory.
Just like the tape and album, and seemingly everything else on the OP-1, I think the samples already have pre-allocated storage spots, which sounds like a very stable and processor-efficient way of organising memory to me.
I’m no expert at these matters, but pre-allocating memory used to be very common in the old days when computers weren’t as snappy as they are today. It means only the pre-allocated memory spot has to be written or read from and the pointer telling the system where to find something is fixed, whereas with a fluid memory organisation, you’d also need to write and read the pointers telling you which memory location to access.