The AudioFuse Studio's reamp outputs offer a creative playground for dub producers. These specialized outputs allow you to send your digital audio signals back through analog gear, perfect for adding warmth, character, and unique textures to your dub tracks. By routing your clean digital tracks through vintage effects pedals, tube preamps, or classic guitar amps, you can infuse your sound with rich harmonics and analog grit. This technique is especially potent for crafting those iconic dub basslines and spacey, echoing guitar licks. The reamp feature also enables you to experiment with parallel processing, sending your tracks simultaneously through different effect chains to create complex, layered soundscapes. Whether you're looking to add subtle analog warmth or create wild, otherworldly textures, the AudioFuse Studio's reamp outputs provide a versatile tool for shaping your dub sound."
Damn, I would never guess spring reverbs had such primitive way of generating sound. I've always thought they have some electromagnetic pickups inside with extra circuit modulating the sound.
I do an "effects loop".. The first mixer I had (I was in Brazil, so it was (still is) real hard to get nice new equipment) was an old "zone mixer" (a mixer with different outputs) with 2 outputs and 4 channels (I used 1 for the turntable, 1 for an old s2000 sampler (behemoth) that I used mainly as a siren (made the basic tone looping and time-stretching a low piano note, sounded like some King Tubby's siren), 1 for occasional mic and 1 as a effects return), the outputs had switches on each channel (kind of industrial switches, on top of the channel's knob, 1 for each output), so I used the second output as an effects send, on the effects machine I set the mix to 50% and when I wanted the effects (usually a delay) I inverted the position of both switches and then switched back to end the effects send (if I set the effect mix (on the delay machine) to 100% I can just switch the 2nd output on and off too, etc..), it was VERY FUN to apply the effects in this manner... Now I am using a Soundcraft Compact 10, using the 'record' button (it mutes the main output and sends the audio to the 'rec' output, basically the same thing as turning the switches on the old mixer) to route effects... Good thing about this way is that you can just set the appropriate volumes and then just press the button (or flip the switches, on the old mixer) whenever you want the effects to be sent (no need for turning knobs), the bad thing is that you sacrifice one of the mixer's channels... But OH on the old mixer it felt so incredibly rootsy to apply the effects XD... will see if I can find a video and edit it here... @edit: The old mixer routing effects (there are the behringer fx and a nashville old delay machine).. we used to call it 'the click-clack method' ... fun way to apply effects =D... ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-gYi25zJ0Q1Y.html