If you put room size and feedback to 100% and level to 75%~ on the reverb you can see that the right channel is louder than the left channel. This effect is more noticeable with lots of F keys.
Here is a draft: https://www.audiotool.com/app/#/u3o64r1j
Comments (8)
https://next.audiotool.com/#bky23ooxv4
huh this also happens on flash
Updated and bumping this up because I've encountered this problem very frequently recently.
If you tune the Pulverisateur to -672 or +294 cents you'll get the same effect for the left channel (on F4).
Your extreme settings create a resonance that acts like a comb filter. The Reverb generates a stereo effect and both channels seem to have different resonance frequencies. The frequency for the right channel can be hit by accident using the F-keys. The frequency of the left channel lies between the common keys and is harder to observe.
To me this is not a bug because a real echo chamber without damping exhibits the same effect. It just seemed odd that only one channel had this effect.
ah that makes sense. Is it possible to change the resonance frequency so it's has a similar effect to the left channel?
If this is really a comb effect the lower keys will hit the resonance more likely.
The frequency isn't an explicit parameter in the algorithm and might even change with the sampling rate (not sure about that). I believe it's possible but I don't know if that solution makes sense. Noise, samples, micro-tunings, ... there are lots of ways to hit that frequency. I guess @andremichelle should have a look at this.
In the meantime I'd simply not use such extreme settings.
Alright then, thanks anyway.
As a workaround you can use a stereo mixer to retrieve a mono signal which only contains "the good part".