jlm wrote:Does anyone knows what means "minor" and "major" ?
Should it be 'x' (horizontal), 'y' (vertical) instead? Yes??
Perhaps its some Aeroplane building spiel, Major, Minor? Dunno. :confused:
Ah I get it!
Major is the greater distance over the lesser distance. It makes sense now, and actually it is less confusing (if that is what it means) than x,y.
Think of a MiniMoog synthesizer panel (if you've ever seen one?), The standard saying for feedback on a synthesizer filter (made by other companies is 'resonance', however on a Moog, it is 'Emphasis'. It's always stayed a emphasis on a Moog, because Bob Moog was the first to put a commercial synthesizer out (pretty much), way back in the late 1960's.
Tim is a pioneer too- in the CAD world. Major and Minor, I would guess, are like Moog's 'Emphasis' label. Do you reckon? Perhaps Tim set these standards, yet everyone else broke them?? (or perhaps it was one of those days and Tim couldn't remember the difference between x and y?? :eek: )