Description
Reverb, in our opinion, is one of the most essential effects for any instrument, whether its adding a splash of room to make your sound more βpresentβ or masses of shimmery octave to create a glistening soundscape, its the only effect that many people almost always have on. The Templo is home to eight unique modes, four that are more traditional and four that are quite experimental.
As well as the self-explanatory Decay, Tone, Mix and Level knobs, the Templo has two CTRL knobs that alter distinctive additional parameters for each of the eight modes, giving you even more flexibility to sculpt the perfect reverb sound for your needs. (Itβs also MIDI-compatible, so you can expand your horizons to 128 presets with a MIDI controller.)
It doesnβt stop there though, the Templo is also loaded with secondary functionality such as 5 on-board presets, a kill dry switch, momentary max decay capability, full expression pedal control and a very unique tap feature that allows you quckly switch between short, medium and long decay times.
The Temploβs eight modes are:
- Spring/tile: Voiced around the various spring reverb tanks used in countless classic amps, shorter decay and delay times offer a very sharp and reflective sound we call βtileβ (think playing in a large bathroom). CTRL 1 lets you extend the pre delay time to emulate a larger spring tank, CTRL 2 alters the short delay time which adds more βspringinessβ to the sound.
- Room/hall: A flexible βall-rounderβ reverb that offers room (short decay/pre delay) and hall (long decay/pre delay) sounds. CTRL 1 alters the predelay and CTRL 2 affects the low frequency loss.
- Cave: A deep, dark verb capable of long decay times combined with a wide-ranging modulation section. CTRL 1 & 2 control the modulation rate and depth respectively.
- Solid State: Based around the delay time structure of the MN3011 bucket brigade delay chip that was used in many analog/solid state verb units. CTRL 1 alters the main delay time that the other delay taps centre around, CTRL 2 offers a diffusion/dampening control to make the delay reflections less obvious.
- Whirl: A large church style reverb combined with a four voice chorus. CTRL 1 & 2 control the modulation rate and depth respectively.
- Spectral: A large church style reverb combined with a lower octave duplication as well as a higher octave shimmer effect. CTRL 1 is the lower octave mix, CTRL 2 is the higher octave shimmer mix/intensity.
- Lo-Fi: A shorter/thinner reverb with very intense high pass filtering & sharper sounding modulation. CTRL 1 controls the modulation speed, CTRL 2 alters the frequency of a 2 pole high pass filter.
- Granular: A dissonant, artifact-filled verb combined with a bitcrushing/aliaser effect. On this patch the decay control can also mix out the reverb, leaving just the bitcrusher/aliaser. CTRL 1 is the aliaser frequency, CTRL is the aliaser mix.
The Temploβs seven dials:
- Decay: Reverb time (max decay varies across patches)
- CTRL 1: Additional parameter
- CTRL 2: Additional parameter
- Tone: EQ for the wet signal
- Level: Output volume
- Mix: Blend control (from 100% wet to 100% dry)
- 1-8: Effect selector
Plus, it has four footswitches:
- Engage: Turn it on and off
- Kill dry: Removes the dry signal, has both a momentary and latching mode.
- Preset: Access your favourite sounds
- Tap: Quickly tap between short and long decay times, hold down for max decay time.
Not to mention:
- Top-mounted in/out jacks (with full stereo options)
- Expression pedal input
- MIDI input
- Power requirements: 9V DC (center-negative) supply
- Current draw: 250 mA
Dimensions:Β
- (W)180 mm x (L)120 mm x (H)55 mm
Want even more details? Course you do, download the Templo manual here.Β
Please donβt try to power this pedal with anything other than a 9V DC supply. If you do, your shiny new pedal might stop working, and nobody wants that.