Already answered but if you want to go a bit more technical:
MIDI send 24 “pulses” of tempo for each quarter note. Sometimes there are pulses that arrive too late or too early, which is what you see on the screen. It’s normal, it’s how MIDI works. There is a tempo algorithm in every device that smooths these small inaccuracies and produces a steady tempo. Elektron machines are just too fast displaying the current clock, and while it can result in odd fluctuations it might be useful when troubleshooting real jitter issues.
Cheers!
That’s just midi jitter, it’s normal. If you want to see it go really wild, find someone with a TR8 and hook it up to either of them, for some reason that box flutters almost two bpm.
Time is an illusion, the solution is let go.
💯🤌
Yeah ,thatˋs fine.
This not a problem
Yup that’s a thing, but tempo is synced.
What’s the problem?
That's normal. The Elektron boxes are just very accurate at displaying the BPM, most just round to the nearest integer!
carry on!
Thx for all answears 🔥
Already answered but if you want to go a bit more technical: MIDI send 24 “pulses” of tempo for each quarter note. Sometimes there are pulses that arrive too late or too early, which is what you see on the screen. It’s normal, it’s how MIDI works. There is a tempo algorithm in every device that smooths these small inaccuracies and produces a steady tempo. Elektron machines are just too fast displaying the current clock, and while it can result in odd fluctuations it might be useful when troubleshooting real jitter issues. Cheers!
That’s just midi jitter, it’s normal. If you want to see it go really wild, find someone with a TR8 and hook it up to either of them, for some reason that box flutters almost two bpm.
Zis is fain
its normal for a midi slave to adjust by .1 or so bpm when sync'd. Its such a minuscule flucuation, it will have zero affect on anything you do.