I've used Pin Connections on the Track level to route the unprocessed signal to the left channel of the x42 Simple Scope Stereo, and then passed the processed one to the right channel (or reverse, it doesn't matter). In SiSco you can click Common Y offset button and that'll make the two waveforms overlap additively, so where they are on top of each other you see yellow, and either green or red where one is present but not the other.To route the dry signal I had to swithc pin connections fro Debess to manual, add an extra output, and route the input directyl to it, bypassing the plug-in. This way I had both dry and wet signals passing down the processing chain so I can connect them to the Simple Scope for visualisation.
Yeah I tried, but it gives something like this :Maybe something can be done with the stock Spectrum Meter, its sidechain option, and its L-R channel mode. Be creative, and report back![]()
You should at least set the vertical scale to dB rather than %. And yes, the time scale is limited.Yep, here it is : explains in the comments how he did it :
So far I tried with native Scope, doing this :
- create a bus, call it the Raw bus
- create a Send from the track to this Raw bus
- have the plugin on the original track bus but not on the Raw bus
- set the plugin bus to pan Left
- set the raw bus to pan right
- have Scope on Main : set A to left, B to right
- set Time on max
And I get this :
View attachment 1675
But it's not a satisfying result, because :
- for a reason unknown to me, the audio from Raw bus is much less louder than the plugin one (it’s not because of the plugin), so comparison is not relevant
- the time window is very short
- it doesn’t make a substraction of the 2 signals, you just see one above the other.
So next step is to try the plugin « Simple Scope Stereo » used in the video. But the signal routing in Reaper seems to work differently (better ?).
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