Head over to the Red Panda Lab website for more details. It delivers a wide range of sounds including modulated and harmonized delays, reverse delays, chorus, arpeggios, i. Forward or reverse delay can be shifted once or have continuously shifted repeats. Advertisement According to Red Panda, the Raster 2 is capable of extreme sonic mayhem, whether its ring modulated sounds, inharmonic shifted delays, chaotic self-oscillations. The Raster is a digital delay with a pitch and frequency shifter integrated into the feedback loop. Shipping will start late summer or the early fall 2021. The Raster 2’s quirkier tendencies manifest with pitch shifting up and down by semitones or finer detuning along with seven different modulation waveforms. Per the brand, the Raster 2 is “capable of extreme sonic mayhem” and retails for $299. Instead of multiple modes with generic knob names, all of the parameters are always available, so you can mix and match different effects and explore new sounds in between,” Red Panda detailed. “While designing the Raster 2, we wanted to enable as many classic rack mount digital delay tricks as possible while keeping the fast and intuitive control that made the original Raster so fun to use. You can see the quirkier tendencies of the newer Raster in pitch shifting and seven different modulation waveforms. Alternate knob settings are related to the primary knob function, labeled, and off at the center position. Even better, it pairs with a web-based editor so you can modify presets and access some “hidden features.”Īlso available on deck is up to 3,200ms of forward delay and 1,600ms of stereo delay, with reverse, series, parallel, and ping pong options on offer. The original Raster was praised for its knob response and immediacy, and the Raster 2 maintains that simplicity while adding flexible modulation and extensive stereo functionality. Red Panda has unveiled the Raster 2, a studio-quality digital delay in stompbox format loaded with frequency and pitch modulation functionalities.īuilding upon its predecessor, the Raster 2 comes with longer delay times, stereo outputs, and MIDI compatibility, all while preserving the original’s responsiveness.