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Description
Experience the perfect fusion of classic analog charm and modern digital flexibility with the Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay plug-in. This versatile delay effect is designed for musicians and producers who crave the warmth and character of vintage delay units, paired with the precision and control of contemporary software. Whether you're crafting subtle slapbacks or creating expansive echo soundscapes, the H-Delay delivers a rich, dimensional sound that adds depth to any mix.
Its intuitive interface mimics traditional hardware, making it a breeze to dial in the perfect delay settings. With features like variable pitch time behavior and infinite feedback, you can explore creative depths previously reserved for hardware aficionados. The built-in highpass and lowpass filters allow you to seamlessly blend your delay effects, ensuring they sit perfectly within any mix. Plus, with MIDI support and tempo-sync capabilities, integrating the H-Delay into your workflow is as smooth as its sonic output.
Unlock a world of sonic possibilities with modulation effects, Lo-Fi settings, and five distinct analog tone options that enhance the plug-in's versatility. Whether you're aiming for a clean digital delay or a gritty analog vibe, the H-Delay is your go-to tool for achieving professional results in any genre.
Key Features:
- Variable delay time up to 3500 ms
- Infinite feedback for endless creative possibilities
- Highpass and lowpass filters for precise sound shaping
- LFO-controlled pitch modulation
- Lo-Fi and multiple analog character modes
- Tap-tempo and full MIDI support for seamless integration
- Intuitive analog-style interface
Product specs
| Software Type | Analog-style Delay |
| Platform | Mac, PC |
| Upgrade/Full | Full |
| Download/Boxed | Download |
| Bit Depth | 64-bit |
| Format | AAX Native, AudioSuite, VST, AU, SoundGrid |
| Hardware Requirements - Mac | Intel Core i7 or higher (M1 support), 8GB RAM minimum |
| Hardware Requirements - PC | Intel Core i5 / AMD Quad-core or higher (AVX required), 8GB RAM minimum |
| OS Requirements - Mac | macOS 10.15.7 or later |
| OS Requirements - PC | Windows 10 or later (21H2), 64-bit |
FAQs
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What are the standout features of the Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay?
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The Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay offers analog-style delay effects, including tape delay, chorusing, and vibrato, with an intuitive interface. It features BPM sync, modulation, filters, and a tap tempo button for versatile sound shaping.
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Is the Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay compatible with my DAW?
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The Waves H-Delay is compatible with major DAWs that support AAX Native, AudioSuite, VST, AU, or SoundGrid formats, ensuring broad integration across different setups.
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What are the system requirements for running the Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay?
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For Mac, it requires macOS 10.15.7 or later, an Intel Core i7 or higher (M1 supported), and 8GB RAM. For PC, it needs Windows 10 or later (21H2), Intel Core i5 / AMD Quad-core or higher (AVX required), and 8GB RAM.
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Can I use the Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay for live performances?
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Yes, the Waves H-Delay is suitable for live performances, offering real-time control over delay effects with features like tap tempo and modulation to enhance live sound dynamics.
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Does the Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay support 64-bit processing?
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Yes, the Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay supports 64-bit processing, ensuring efficient performance and compatibility with modern digital audio workstations.
Videos
Waves Audio
Using Waves H-Delay in Electronic Music Production: Part 1 – Drums
Reviews
PROS
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Reminiscent of Roland Space Echo with added low and high pass filters
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Efficient CPU usage, perfect for home studios
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Built-in tap button for quick delay setting
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Presets available for a wide range of sounds
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Suitable for a variety of instruments, including bass synths and guitars
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Easy installation and user-friendly interface
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Unique modulation settings that add character
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Excellent quality-to-price ratio
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Versatile enough to work on any audio source
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Offers an analog-like sound in a digital format
CONS
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Compatibility issues with macOS Catalina 10.15.6
Owner Insights
We analyzed real musician discussions from forums and Reddit to find what players love, question, and tweak about Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay.
Features and functionality
Comparisons
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Echoboy is frequently recommended as a superior analog emulation alternative, providing both clean and lo-fi delay effects.
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Goodhertz DC19 is highlighted for sound design options and chaos, expanding on H-Delay's simplicity while addressing user frustrations.
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Users highlight FabFilter Timeless and Valhalla Delay as worthy alternatives, noting their unique control interfaces and sound quality, especially for experimental workflows.
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Software and compatibility
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Many users express frustration with Waves' licensing model, highlighting issues with reactivation and mandatory updates, especially on new Mac systems.
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Some users mention that Arturia's delay plugins, included in their collection, offer good alternatives, especially since older versions can be acquired at discounted prices.
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Use cases and applications
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Users appreciate H-Delay for its ease of use and quick setup, particularly valuing its analog-style interface and ping-pong delay effect.
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Goodhertz DC19 presets include "bread and butter" options and homages to famous effects, providing diverse starting points for sound design.
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It's noted that H-Delay serves as a quick, reliable choice for last-minute projects, making it a go-to for spontaneous late-night sessions.
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Other
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Deelay by Sixth Sample is highlighted as a powerful free option, with a noted limitation on longer delay times when synced to host tempo.
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Value and pricing
User experience
Critic Reviews
4.5 out of 5
Based on 4 Reviews and 49 Ratings
787
One of the best delay plugins available.
Waves H-Delay is amazing. There are tons of pre-configured presets for whatever sound you are looking for, but if you want to get crazy, you can do it in a few seconds. I mean, how can you go wrong with a plugin even Devon Townsend uses for VST delays?
129
Favorite Delay Plugin
I am no stranger to analog gear and the way it sounds compared to it's digital counterparts. However I also see the advantages of having a plugin delay. This is the perfect marriage of the two worlds. I love this delay on everything and it can do some really cool stuff.
Artist usage
Add artist
In the YouTube video "HOW TO SOUND LIKE DAFT PUNK," Composerily demonstrates the use of the Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay plugin.
Used for Quavo and Offest's features on Beyoncé and Jay-Z's "Apeshit", as stated by producer Stuart White in this September 2018 Sound on Sound interview.
The first four aux tracks feature SoundToys effects, namely Little Microshift, two EchoBoy delays, and a delay from the Little PrimalTap. Next are a Hall Reverb aux and a Church Reverb aux, both using Waves’ RVerb, an EMT plate from Audio Ease’s Altiverb, four aux tracks with the Waves H-Delay and various other plug-ins on them as well, and four more reverb auxes with the Avid Revibe II, two Avid D-Verbs and another RVerb.
White: “I use the Little Microshift in pretty much every mix, with the left-right micro pitch-shift effect that’s similar to the classic effect in the Eventide H3000 shift where you pitch one side down six cents and one side up six cents to create width. It’s a good way to get your vocals wider without them being out of phase. It thickens up vocals, and is kind of like a doubler. I do quite a lot of filtering on some of the EchoBoy delays, for example with the Waves REQ, and I am adding colour with the SoundToys Devil-Loc, which is great if you want to colour the delay so it is separate from the main vocal, and compress it with the UAD LA3A and mix that in to taste.”
(...) “The Migos vocals came in as seven audio tracks, with the Avid D-Verb on each of them. Putting a D-Verb on a track before EQ is not something I normally do, but it sounded great. So I adjusted them a bit, but otherwise left them as they were. The tracks also came in with the Aux track above, and the EQ3, with a high pass at 60Hz and notches at 430Hz and 1.41kHz and a high boost, the Waves API 2500 compressor, the RComp, the Waves Q10 EQ, following a slightly similar curve to the EQ3, the Waves De-esser, the Waves Aphex Aural Exciter, and the Avid Dyn3 expander/gate. I added the EQ3, with another high-pass filter at 144Hz, and the RComp, with a ratio of 10:1.”
Used on vocals for "Ransom", as mentioned by mix engineer Joseph Colmenero in this November 2019 Sound on Sound interview.
"Many of the plug-ins on the vocal tracks came with the session. The vocal audio tracks all have Antares Auto-Tune Pro because the session came with Auto-Tune Live, and I didn't have my licence with me, so I put Auto-Tune Pro on. Without seeing the Live plug-in I had to use my ears to make sure that the settings were exactly right. They had recorded Tecca's vocals with Auto-Tune on, playing Auto-Tune like an instrument.
"All audio tracks go to the LeadVox bus, on which there is a stack of plug-ins. Again many of them came with the session. The chain starts with the Waves Q6 EQ, the FabFilter Pro-C2 compressor, then a Waves SSL Channel, two Waves De-Essers, a Waves RVox used as a noise gate, the SoundToys Decapitator for vibe, and a Waves C4 to bang down some peak frequencies. There's a track with distant ad-libs that goes to the Harmony Vox aux, which has some similar plug-ins, and adds a D-Verb for some extra reverb. There are sends on the vocal busses to the reverb aux, with the Waves RVerb, and delay quarter-note aux, with the Waves H-Delay. I also have the Avid EQ7 before the reverb, to take out the low end and high end. You don't want to have esses all over your reverb. The other two aux tracks that I did not use are part of the producer's template."
Used for vocals on "ESSKEETIT", as outlined by producer CBMIX in this May 31, 2018 Genius Deconstructed interview at 4:05.
So, the vocals, I actually recorded them through an aux track. The plugin chain for the vocals is the RComp, SSL Channel Strip, and a de-esser [pulls up Dynamics III De-esser]. There's literally, absolutely no EQ on the vocal at all. It was just a proper vocal tone, I had the mic set up right, I had him on the mic right. I'll solo the lead vocal of the hook. That's dry. With the delay and reverb, it kind of makes it a little more spacey, but it's very low and very subtle. Here's my delay setting. It's a H-Delay. Super low feedback, super filtered. My reverb setting is just a D-Verb, 1.7 decay time. I put a one-band EQ to take out some of the mud of the reverb afterwards.
Used on the vocals for "When the Curtain Falls", as stated by mix engineer Al Sutton in this January 2019 Sound on Sound interview.
"The main lead vocal, track 48, has the Opticom for some compression, and I'll always have a parallel lead vocal channel next to it, called 'smash', again for parallel compression, and it'll have tons of plug-ins and I'll just crush it to pieces, almost to the point of distortion, and tuck that underneath the main vocal. The plug-ins on the 'smash' channel include the Waves SSL Channel, Waves CLA-76, Waves DeEsser, Waves H-Delay, and the Soundtoys PhaseMistress. The latter is to get the choruses to sound wider, and the track has some automated delays. For vocal reverb I use the Echoplate 2 [plate reverb] with a Delta Labs Effectron II for pre-delay, and depending on the song either a Lexicon Primetime II or Fulltone Echoplex for slap-back delay.
"Finally there are the backing vocals, on which I had again the Waves SSL-Channel, CLA-76 and DeEsser, and then the Waves SuperTap delay, for stereo delays in the choruses, also to get them to sound wider. I do the vocal blend in Pro Tools and, depending on the parts, will send the blends out on one of the two stereo outs. In this case I had two sets of stereo outs to the API and I compressed each pair lightly with the Inward Connections TSL3 and TSL1."
To glue everything together, Al Sutton once again employs parallel compression. "The API Legacy has an A bus and a B bus, and I'll put a Shadow Hills compressor on the B bus. I'll blend that back in with the A bus, and I'll print that back on as a stereo track in the session. I'll print a brickwalled track as well so we can hear the mix really loud, and get some idea of where we'll end up. But I'll send my mix uncompressed to mastering, which for this album was done by Ryan Smith at Sterling Sound. I leave loudness up to the mastering engineer, because I don't want to play that game any more. It just ruins your mixes. If you can get at a competitive volume without having all the dynamics smacked out of your mixes, I think it will resonate more with people."
The sends on chorus lead vocal go to aux tracks with the Waves H–Delay, the FXpansion Bloom with a lush, wide stereo delay, a small chamber from the QL Spaces plug–in, a mono delay from the UAD Echoplex, and several other delays
Used on Cardi B's vocals for "Bodak Yellow", as mentioned by mix engineer Evan LaRay in this February 2018 Sound on Sound interview.
In his mix of ‘Bodak Yellow’, Evan LaRay used almost identical vocal chains on two auxiliary busses. The ‘Vox 1’ chain includes FabFilter’s Pro-DS de-esser and Waves’ C4 multiband compressor, plus the Waves CLA Vocals plug-in and SoundToys’ Decapitator saturation processor.
The main ‘Hook’ and ‘Verse’ vocal tracks have similar plug-in chains, incorporating the EQ3 seven-band, Waves CLA-76 and Waves De-esser, though the ‘Hook’ also has FabFilter’s Timeless 2 delay. LaRay explains, “The EQ on the ‘Hook’ has a high-pass, around 100Hz, and I’m also cutting 3dB at 300Hz, because the vocal sounded a bit muddy, and again 3dB at 4kHz, because there was a piercing frequency there. The CLA keeps the peaks in check, and the de-esser again takes some higher frequencies out, at 4270Hz, and the Timeless is another favourite plug-in. I think in general the FabFilter plug-ins are extremely dope. I wanted the ‘Hook’ vocal to stand out from the ‘Verse’ vocal, so I used a stereo delay preset, and then tweaked that. The presets on the FabFilter plug-ins are pretty good: you just run through all of them and then choose the best one. In this case I lowered the width and the wet value of the stereo delay preset, and that sounded good and gave the hook its own space. The three plug-ins on the ‘Verse’ track do pretty much the same.
“The ‘Inout’ tracks that are below the ‘Hook’ and the ‘Verse’ are vocal doubles. They are words or lines we use for emphasis and additional power on these lines and words. They come from one of her original vocal takes, which I just cut and cleaned up. Both ‘Inout’ tracks have the Waves RCompressor, just containing these words and lines so they don’t overwhelm the ‘Hook’ or the ‘Verse’ vocal, and then the FabFilter Pro-Q2, taking out some high frequencies, again to make sure it doesn’t clash with the leads, and also cutting below 200Hz. And there’s a delay on these tracks to put them in a slightly different space from the lead vocal tracks.
“In addition to the two ‘Inout’ tracks, both the ‘Hook’ and the ‘Verse’ tracks are also accompanied by an ‘Ad Libs’ track, which were some ad libs Cardi had recorded with Mike over at Krematorium. Mike had also set up a separate aux track for these ad libs, which is ‘Vox2’, and I liked that and kept two of the plug-ins he had on that: the [Avid] Sansamp for some distortion and the SoundToys Panman. I then added the D-Verb and the [Waves] CLA Vocals. I adore the CLA Vocals. I use it on every track I work on. When I don’t use it, the vocals sound completely different. I’d love to know what exactly it does! Finally, the inserts have the Waves L1, just to control the peaks.
“The other tracks — ‘EXF1’, ‘EXF2’, ‘EXF3’ and ‘EXF4’, are because I prefer to create a new track if I want to have a specific effect on specific words or phrases. I prefer doing that to automating the effects on a track. Automation is great, but I tend to only do volume automation. So I copy audio to another track, and then put the effect on that, and in this case I created four different effects tracks with four different delays. ‘EFX1’ is the main one, and has the same three plug-ins as the Verse tracks — EQ3 three-band, CLA76 and Waves De-esser — just with the EQ3 cutting more of the high frequencies. Then there’s an eighth-note ping-pong delay from the Waves H-Delay, and then a D-Verb set to ‘hall’ with 7s decay and a 15ms pre-delay. ‘EFX2’ has another H-Delay delay, ‘EFX3’ the Timeless 2 delay, and ‘EFX4’ again has the H-Delay plus a D-Verb.”
All the main vocal audio tracks go to LaRay’s ‘Vox1’ aux group track. This, he explains, has “A FabFilter Pro-DS de-esser, then the Waves RCompressor controlling the peaks, the Waves C4 multiband compressor boosting the high end and containing the lows in her voice, so it doesn’t cut through too much, and Waves CLA Vocals. Again, it’s really making my vocals sound good. I push the Pitch fader to stereo, spank it on the compressor, also push up the treble to brighten it up, turn the reverb down to ‘tight’, and lower the delay by 9dB because my own quarter delay is my main vocal delay, and it sounds great. There’s also a SoundToys Decapitator, to add more harmonic distortion, and then there’s the Waves RVox. That was supposed to be the final plug-in on the insert, but then I realised the vocal was still peaking too much once she began rapping loudly, so I put on the L1 [limiter] to control that.”
The ‘special sauce’ in Evan LaRay’s mixes comes from a parallel aux channel containing a blend of compression, saturation, EQ and other processors. Key ingredients are Waves’ PuigChild compressor and PuigTech equaliser.
The ‘Vox1’ and ‘Vox2’ tracks also each have a Trim plug-in on an insert, and sends to the ‘Verb’ aux and to the ‘ELR’ (LaRay’s initials) track. “I put the Trim on all my tracks at the end of the vocals, and at the end of the beat, because the vocals actually began distorting in places. These two tracks were too hot, and I wanted to make sure they had a good level before going to the ‘Sub Print’ track. I have the ‘ELR’ aux track in every session. It’s most of all parallel compression, but I also always try out new things with distortion, exciters and things like that, and I label that ‘ELR’. In this case it really is the ‘ELR’ track that makes the vocals cut through the mix.
“The compression on the ‘ELR’ track comes from the Waves PuigChild 670, which is a great compressor, and it’s compressing a lot, so the vocal stays right there in the middle. The signal is then going to the PuigTech EQP-1A, which is boosting some low end to add some warmth to the vocals, and some 5kHz, and then the Waves Aphex Vintage Aural Exciter, set to AX Mix 6, for some added crispness and clarity, then the EQ3 seven-band to control the low mids, and another De-Esser cutting 4398Hz, to finalise the vocal sound. The L1 also helps keep the vocals in the same place. Finally, the ‘Verb’ send on the ‘Vox1’ and ‘Vox2’ tracks goes to the ‘Verb’ aux, which has the Waves RVerb, and that pretty much glues everything together.”
Album Usage
The Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay has been featured on the following albums:
Blessings
Calvin Harris (2025)
Smalltown Boy (ABSOLUTE. Rework)
Bronski Beat & ABSOLUTE. (2024)
Wonderland
ABSOLUTE. (2021)
Ganglia
Andrew Huang (2020)
Rockabye
Clean Bandit (2019)
Old Town Road (Remix)
Billy Ray Cyrus & Lil Nas X & Mason Ramsey (2019)
ASTROWORLD
Travis Scott (2018)
Esskeetit
Lil Pump (2018)
Black Panther The Album Music From And Inspired By
Kendrick Lamar & SZA (2018)
Bodak Yellow (feat. Messiah) [Latin Trap Remix]
Cardi B (2017)
Bodak Yellow (feat. Kodak Black)
Cardi B & Kodak Black (2017)
Closer
The Chainsmokers & Halsey (2016)
Hymn for the Weekend (Seeb Remix)
Coldplay & seeB (2016)
22, A Million
Bon Iver (2016)
Run The Jewels 3 (Instrumentals)
Killer Mike & El-P (2016)
Run The Jewels 3
Run the Jewels & Killer Mike & El-P (2016)
Purpose (Deluxe)
Justin Bieber (2015)
A Head Full of Dreams
Coldplay (2015)
VERY RARE FOREVER FREESTYLE
XXXTENTACION (2015)
Here Comes The Sun
Will K (2015)
In The Mode
Roni Size & Roni Size / Reprazent (2000)
Genre Usage
Based on how artists on Equipboard use this gear, it is most commonly found in the following genres.
Used With
Based on how musicians on Equipboard use Waves H-Delay Hybrid Delay, it is most commonly used with the following gear.
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