110 BPM Delay Times
Every tempo-synced delay and reverb time at 110 BPM, in milliseconds — normal, dotted and triplet. The chart is pre-filled for 110 BPM; change the tempo to recalculate, and tap any value to copy it.
| Note | Normal | Dotted ·1.5 | Triplet ·⅔ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whole1/1 | |||
| Half1/2 | |||
| Quarter1/4 · beat | |||
| Eighth1/8 | |||
| Sixteenth1/16 | |||
| Thirty-second1/32 |
Tap any value to copy it to your clipboard. Switch to Hz to sync an LFO.
Delay & reverb times at 110 BPM
At 110 BPM one beat (a quarter note) is 545.45 ms, so an eighth-note delay is 272.73 ms and a sixteenth is 136.36 ms. Dial any of these into your delay or set a tempo-synced reverb's pre-delay to the sixteenth and its tail to fade around a beat or two. The full chart above covers every note value.
The dotted-eighth delay at 110 BPM
The famous dotted-eighth delay — the shimmering, off-grid repeat behind countless guitar and pop productions — is 409.09 ms at 110 BPM (1.5× the 272.73 ms eighth note). A triplet delay is ⅔ of the plain note instead, giving a rolling, galloping echo; both columns are in the chart.
110 BPM in context
One hundred and ten BPM is the loose, body-moving tempo of modern hip-hop, dancehall and downtempo house. Quick enough to dance to, relaxed enough to rap over — a favourite of trap-pop crossovers and reggaeton. Practise against it in the 110 BPM metronome — the only one with named human feels.
Find your BPM
Not sure of your track's tempo? Tap it out and it sends the BPM straight to the full delay calculator. Switch the chart above to Hz (it's just 1000 ÷ ms) to sync an LFO, tremolo or auto-filter.