I have been using gigapulse as a reverb for my VSL tracks; the problem I've found is that I want to put the gigapulse instances on aux tracks, and then dial in the amount of reverb that I want in the inputs. This is how I'd use a "standard" reverb -- set the reverb's wet/dry mix to 100% wet, put it on an aux buss, and then use a send from each track with varying amounts of send. More send = more reverb on that track. With gigapulse it seems like I have to set the fader to "pre" and turn the dry signal down to 0, just use gigapulse in other words. that means i can't control different wetness for different tracks routed to the same aux buss.
Is that supposed to work that way? Can I instead leave the fader not on pre, leave the level how I want it, and just mix in wet signal with the sends to the aux (as I would on a standard reverb)?
Do other convolution reverbs behave differently? Altiverb, e.g.?
Is that supposed to work that way? Can I instead leave the fader not on pre, leave the level how I want it, and just mix in wet signal with the sends to the aux (as I would on a standard reverb)?
Do other convolution reverbs behave differently? Altiverb, e.g.?