Classic Flanger plugin - click to resize
Take a trip back to the mid 80's with our Classic Flanger. It will give you that subtle or massive swirling effect that is used mainly for guitar, but can be used for many other instruments as well. Due to a tightly controlled feedback path, it is possible to boost the flanging effect to maximum without getting unwanted side effects.
Features:
Smooth Flanger effects,
Stereo spread,
Host Synchronization,
Presets,
Ultra low CPU usage,
Supports sampling rates up to 96kHz,
Full VST automation.
free vst plugin. pc
Mdsp Flanger:
This is "another flanger" with the particularity that the LFO is synchronizable to the tempo with different waveforms (triangle, sin, square, triangle exponential, random...) and a smoothing factor for the waveform, so that you can achieve some new effects not available on classical flangers.
free vst plugin. pc
KR-Flanger features:
Uses High Quality interpolated delays.
Adjustable rate frequency from 0.5 to 7Hz
Adjustable LFO depth from 0 to 100%
Dry/Wet Mix adjustment
Output adjustment from -20 to +6db.
Host Sampling Frequency up to 96Khz.
For Microsoft Windows OS (VST) suitable for all Pentium CPUs.
Support for User definable presets (Save & Load) via Host interface.
Braindoc's Stereo Flanger: Stereo-Flanger is a VST-plugIn for the creation of comb-filter and flanger effects. A comb-filter delays the incoming signal by a certain amount of time and mixes the delayed signal with the original signal. Because of interference between the two signals, there will be peaks and notches in the resulting signal - peaks occur at frequencies, where the original and delayed signal are in phase, notches occur at frequenceis, where the phase bewteen the original and the delayed signal is 180° - at these frequencies, the two signals cancel out each other. The positions of these peaks and notches is determined by the delay-time and they will always have a harmonic relationship - that is: they are all integer multiples of some fundamental frequency. It is also possible to feed back the output of the delayline back to its input - this emphasizes the peaks in the spectrum. When the delaytime is modulated over time (with a LFO, for example), the peaks and notches slide back and forth on the frequncy-axis - this is flanging. Stereo-Flanger provides two LFO-modulated delaylines - one for the left and one for the right channel.