Another nice thing to do when you have an analogue sequencer (I use a Korg SQ10, but in fact any CV sequencer such as a Roland MC-202 or TB-303 will do) is to send its outputs to the PC1600 inputs. If properly done, all 'analogue' sequencer features such as slide/portamento, external speed modulation, real-time sequence adaption etc can be applied to almost any synth and sampler MIDI parameter as well :) In fact what I get is an extremely programmable MIDI LFO cq *real* analogue MIDI sequencer! A bit like the more recent Doepfer analogue MIDI sequencer. It's great for stuff like pitch bends, various filter parameters, for messing up fx-units, playing notes, creating 'controller envelopes', but of course the destination can be any MIDI data. Another 'trick' for people using an analogue synth cabable of spitting out CV data from it's LFO: connect the LFO output to the PC1600 input. This is especially nice for MIDI synths/samplers with LFO's that reset at each note trigger. The 'external lfo' won't retrigger at every new note giving a nice monophonic LFO effect :) It'll also allow for LFO speeds way beyond some MIDI-equipment's capabilities - both extremely slow or extremely fast although in some cases the pc1600 isn't fast enough for the latter. E.Bruggeman@student.kun.nl Ernest