Dattorro industry scheme

Dattorro block diagram

The Dattorro industry scheme is a digital system used to implement a wide range of delay-based audio effects for digital signals. It was proposed by Jon Dattorro.[1] The common nature of these effects allows to produce an output signal as the linear combination of (dynamically modulated) delayed replicas of the input signal. The proposed scheme allows to implement such effects in a compact form, only using a set of three parameters to control the type of effect.

The Dattorro industry scheme is based on digital delay lines and to ensure a proper resolution in the time domain, it leverages fractional delay lines, thus avoiding discontinuities.[2]

The effects that this scheme is able to produce are: echo, chorus, vibrato, flanger, doubling, white chorus. These effects are characterized by a nominal delay, a modulating function for the delay and the depth of modulation.[3]

  1. ^ Dattorro, Jon (1997). "Effect Design - Part 2: Delay-Line Modulation and Chorus". Journal of the Audio Engineering Society. 45 (10): 764–788.
  2. ^ Smith, Julius O.; Lee, Nelson (June 5, 2008), "Computational Acoustic Modeling with Digital Delay", Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics, retrieved 2007-08-21
  3. ^ Zolzer, Udo (2011). DAFX: Digital Audio Effects (PDF). John Wiley and Sons.

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