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Eclipse User Manual
Eclipse User Manual Page 4 of 58 Release 1.10.1
Overviews, Basic Information, and Quickstart
You bought a serious piece of machinery, friend. A benefactor of Eventide’s venerated Orville and H3000
line of effects processors and a quarter century of Eventide’s digital audio excellence, the Eclipse boasts…
The world’s richest sounding and widest array of effects
A global tempo feature that synchronizes LFOs, delay times, and other time-sensitive parameters to the
music being processed
Two configurable effects blocks for serial, parallel, or dual mono processing
An arsenal of LFOs, envelope followers, and ADSRs that can be patched to any parameter
Analog and AES/EBU, S/P DIF, optical, and ADAT digital inputs and outputs for total flexibility
24bit resolution for superb fidelity at up to 96kHz sampling
MIDI control of parameters for inspired creativity
Read on to learn how to put all this muscle to use...
The Big Picture – A Must Read
The Eclipse is conceptually simple. At any given time:
A “program” is loaded. Programs such as delays, reverbs, and pitch shifters (among many others) do the
effecting.
A “tempo” is running (unless turned off!). The Eclipse derives the tempo
from a sequencer connected
to its MIDI In port or from the front panel
TAP key (there are a few other ways to set the tempo). Many parameters
such as LFO rates and delay times change to synchronize with the tempo
.
A “modulation block” is modulating. The modulation block contains LFOs, envelope followers, etc.,
that exist independently and in addition to any LFOs, envelope followers, etc. that are constituents of pro-
grams. You can patch parameters from programs to these LFOs, envelope followers, etc.
A suite of “global parameters” defines the Eclipse’s overall behavior. Global parameters are such things
as input and output levels, digital audio speeds and protocols, MIDI channels, and so on.
You load and save programs with the PROGRAM key, and a program’s most important parameters are lo-
cated under the
HOT KEYS key. A program contains two “effects blocks” and the routing between them
(series, parallel, etc.) accessible with the
PARAMETER key (some programs only use one of the two available effects blocks). An
“effects block” runs one of the Eclipse’s core set of “algorithms.” The algorithms are described in the sepa-
rately provided “Eclipse Algorithms” document. Put another way:
A program, such as
Desert Gtr contains one or two effects blocks
and the routing between them (series, parallel, etc.).
An effects block runs an “algorithm,” such as polydriver or diff-
chorus
.
You load and save programs under the
PROGRAM key.
You alter the routing between and the parameters of effects blocks
under the
PARAMETER key.
When it comes to routing signals inside the Eclipse, it’s helpful to think of the effects blocks and the routing
between them as existing within the “DSP.”