
The l|c button switches between a linear curve or a faded exponential/linear curve. It is monitored by a number between the buttons and the outputs. The sec knob indicates how many seconds (floored, 0-60) it takes for the drop tempo to rise back to the normal tempo. This relationship is also indicated by the RGB light on the button which is red when the cycle is 1/2 and under, purple when 1/2 and over, and green when completed. Between the metronome red lights are two red lights that indicate the relative balance between the drop tempo and the master tempo. When that toggle button is engaged (red) the tempo drops to the level preset by the ^ knob which is metered as a number below the master module tempo.

The second knob down on the left labelled ^ is the drop tempo which is initiated by the button lit by an RGB in the bottom middle of the module. Each of these controls is floored, so the maximum resolution for each tempo step is 1 BPM for the left knob and. The left knob controls the number left of the decimal point (0-240) while the knob on the right controls the number right of the decimal point (00-99). The first two knobs across the top are the main tempo controls. The measure counter wraps around to 0 after 999 measures. This counts the number of trigger pulses received from the 1 measure clock since the clock began running. The fading is added for visual effect and also to visually separate them from the others.Ībove these outputs is a measure counter. Like all of the other clocks, they are on for half their duration and off for the other half (square wave). Here is the total list of the clock outputs listed top to bottom left to right:Ĭolumn 3 uses a lighting system that differs from how this library usually functions – although the lights fade to red, the are not actually decreasing in signal strength proportionally. The slow red fading lights mark measures. The output to the right is a 1/8th triplet.

The outputs are multitude, but they are easy to understand: the red fading output can be considered the quarter note pulse. CL!K is an advanced clocking system that is meant to be a rhythmic heart of a patch.
