Actually, Jerm, I am more or less pleased with what I am hearing, but just wonder if or HOW MUCH my understanding is flawed. I don't see a big description of how the faders and pans intereact, so i am just guessing.
Jerm wrote:Sometimes you want the main fader tied to the effect send and sometimes you don't. If you plan on fading out the track entirely then you probably want the effect post-fader. If, on the other hand, you want the track's effect sends to be completely independent of the main fader, like in the case when you only want to hear only the wet signal, then you want the switch to be set to pre-fader.
OK. I THINK for me POST Works. I have no reason to only hear the wet signal (I don't think).
It seems using the PRE would be usful in a live situation where I want the audence to get onething and the band to get the other.....Or so it seems.
As for your other question, I don't really have an answer. If you don't trust your ears then you should trust someone else's ears or get better headphones or studio monitors. The ears are the only thing you can trust, assuming you have a decent monitoring system. Try listening on multiple stereo systems.
Thanks...actually i am getting comfortable with hearing, but i guess a problem is I don't know what the EXPECTED result of the pans and faders is.....
Or, in other words, the reason for being able to adjust effect in Mixer (aux 1) via BOTH aux 1 fader/pan AND track fader/pan. It seems they do the same.
But let me explain how I did it...and see if this seems a reasonable way to approach it.
SETTINGS
OUT--> my recording-1 InSel 1
OUT--> my recording-2 Insel 2
I record voice on "my recording-1"
I record acoustic guitar on "my recording-2"
ADD EFFECTS
I add reverb to aux 1:
MIXER SETTINGS --MAIN
VOLUME: I adjust the volume for guitar voice and guitar to be comfortable.
PAN: Voice center
Guitar right
AUX-1
In Effects Synths I choose Medium Hall
NOW HERE IS WHERE I AM NOT SURE WHAT IS OPTIMUM OR NORMAL, BUT I WILL DESCRIBE WHAT I AM DOING
EFFECT/SYNTH (reverb)
Send: all the way up
Dry: all the way down (because it seems to be the same as the MAIN sound)
Wet: all the way up.
DOES THIS MAKE SENSE? It sounds ok. My reasoning is that I will be controlling the amount of effect via the track fader in Mixer (Aux 1) so I don't need any dry signal here.
MIXER (AUX)
SET FOR POST (as per above)
AUX ONE
Fader: All the way up
Pan: CENTER
My reasoning here is less assured. It seems I can control the amount of
effect and pan with the track fader and pan in aux 1. So I do not need to do so with the aux 1 fader and pan. Thus:
TRACK ONE/TRACK TWO
FADER: MID WAY UP TO CONTROL AMOUNT
OF REVERB ENTERING THE MIX. MORE FOR THE VOICE, LESS FOR THE GUITAR
TRACK ONE AND TWO PAN
VOICE:
Since main sound is center, I put the pan to the left to give it some breadth or depth or spaciousness,
GUITAR
With the second track (guitar), since the sound is originally right, I pan the track to the center to fill it out or broaden it also.
THIS SEEMS TO WORK, BUT I DON'T HAVE A SENSE OF WHY I CAN USE BOTH AUX 1 --and-- track fader/pan. I hear subtle variations, but it seems that EFFECt fader up and panned center is ok and that i use TRACK fader and pan to control amount of effect and positioning.
This works, but I would like to understand why I have the option of messing with both aux and track fader/pans in Aux 1 of Mixer.
Does what i do above, based on my sense of what SEEMS right seem good enough, or am I missing something. I mean I get get a sound that is ok, but just wonder why the double pan and double fader for effect AND TRACK in mixer (aux 1).
Thanks
paul
(PS I should add that i am FINALLY getting the hang of it, but i just don't find a clear explanation of this partin the manual or anyone asking this in the forum).