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Welcome back to ProGuitarShop and ToneReport.com. Next, Andy skips his way through the CSIDMAN, from Catalinbread. The CSIDMAN is based on the obsolete technology of portable CD players and the anti-shock feature most of them have. The core of the CSIDMAN is a crystal-clear 725ms digital delay with standard controls for Time, Feedback and Mix. Two extra knobs, Latch and Cuts, give you access to a wealth of glitches, chopping and screwing your signal with digital precision. The glitch controls play off one another, turning the Latch knob higher than zero begins the madness by setting the length of the skipping state (memory buffer). The Cuts knob controls the sample rate of the available memory buffer, which translates to skipping speed. Though the pedal is useful as an ambient glitch computer, it's incredibly responsive to picking dynamics. The cuts and skips can play for long periods of time depending on knob position, and picking softly will trigger soft glitching, and hammering the strings gives you a host of digital errors. When the Latch control is fully maxed out, it combines with the delay's Feed control to product an endless loop of broken ambience that runs until you stop it. Like all Catalinbread pedals, the Csidman is made right here in Portland Oregon using the finest parts in the land.