In think the answer is here:
spinlud wrote: ↑Mon Jul 14, 2025 10:05 am
The takeover mode seems to work only when moving the values in Ableton with the mouse.
Takeover mode determines what happens when two different controls (mouse and MIDI) affecting the same Live parameter value cause it to be out of sync with one of them.
Changing the value with the mouse causes it to be out of sync with the hardware controller, so next time you move the controller, the selected behavior (pickup) kicks in.
Your use of the shift button on the controller does not fall under this scenario. Ableton Live is just listening for a certain CC: from its perspective, in the screenshot you posted, CC6 moved incrementally from 22 to 0, stayed 0 for a while, and then made a slightly larger jump from 0 to 12, as if you suddenly moved the knob really quickly. Such a jump in MIDI values is not unusual: since MIDI's temporal resolution is finite, a fast controller movement will easily skip some intermediate values. Even in your screenshot, the initial slow movement from 22 to 0 drops a couple (20, 16, 14...).
So the parameter value mapped to CC6 follows that jump just like it followed the smaller increments before it (from 22 to 0), because as far as Live is concerned, nothing is out of sync – no other controller, like the mouse, has affected the mapped parameter. Live has no way of knowing that during that pause, the same hardware button was controlling a different CC and that's the reason it suddenly ended up in a different position.
So for this scenario, the pickup behavior you're looking for should be implemented on the MIDI controller's side – if that's possible with the Kontrol F1.