Mackie CR1604 - VLZ Echo, Effects devices, EQ curve, Equalization, Fader, Family of curves

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echo

The reflection of sound from a surface such as a wall or a floor. Reverberation and echo are terms that can be used interchangeably, but in audio parlance a distinction is usually made: echo is considered to be a distinct, recogniz- able repetition (or series of repetitions) of a word, note, phrase or sound, whereas rever- beration is a diffuse, continuously smooth decay of sound. Echo and reverberation can be added in sound mixing by sending the original sound to an electronic (or electronic/acoustic) system that mimics natural echoes, and then some. The added echo is returned to the blend through additional mixer inputs. Highly echoic rooms are called live; rooms with very little echo are called dead. A sound source without added echo is dry; one with reverb or echo added is wet.

effects devices

External signal processors used to add re- verb, delay, spatial or psychoacoustic effects to an audio signal. An effects processor may be used as an insert processor (serial) on a par- ticular input or subgroup, or it may be used via the aux send/return system(parallel). See also echo, reverb.

EIN

Equivalent Input Noise. Specification that helps measure the “quietness” of a gain stage by deriving the equivalent input noise voltage nec- essary to obtain a given preamp's output noise. Typically ranges from –125 to –129.5 dBm.

EQ

See equalization.

EQ curve

A graph of the response of an equalizer, with frequency on the x (horizontal) axis and amplitude (level) on the y (vertical) axis. Equalizer types and effects are often named after the shape of the graphed response curve, such as peak, dip, shelf, notch, knee and so on.

equalization

Equalization (EQ) refers to purposefully changing the frequency response of a circuit, sometimes to correct for previous unequal re- sponse (hence the term, equalization), and more often to add or subtract level at certain frequencies for sound enhancement, to remove extraneous sounds, or to create completely new and different sounds.

Bass and treble controls on your stereo are EQ; so are the units called parametrics and graphics and notch filters.

A lot of how we refer to equalization has to do with what a graph of the frequency re- sponse would look like. A flat response (no EQ) is a straight line; a peak looks like a hill, a dip is a valley, a notch is a really skinny valley, and a shelf looks like a plateau (or a shelf). The slope is the grade of the hill on the graph.

Graphic equalizers have enough frequency slider controls to form a graph of the EQ right on the front panel. Parametric EQs let you vary several EQ parameters at once. A filter is sim- ply a form of equalizer that allows certain frequencies through unmolested while reduc- ing or eliminating other frequencies.

Aside from the level controls, EQs are prob- ably the second most powerful controls on any mixer (no, the power switch doesn’t count!).

fader

Another name for an audio level control. Today, the term refers to a straight-line slide control rather than a rotary control.

family of curves

A composite graph showing on one chart several examples of possible EQ curves for a given equalizer or equalizer section.

filter

A simple equalizer designed to remove cer- tain ranges of frequencies. A low-cut filter (also called a high-pass filter) reduces or eliminates frequencies below its cutoff fre- quency. There are also high-cut (low-pass) filters, bandpass filters, which cut both high and low frequencies but leave a band of fre- quencies in the middle untouched, and notch filters, which remove a narrow band but leave the high and low frequencies alone.

flanging

A term for phasing. Before digital delay ef- fects units, phasing could be accomplished by playing two tape machines in synchronization, then delaying one slightly by rubbing a finger on the reel flange. Get it?

FOH

An acronym for Front Of House. See house and main house speakers.

frequency

The number of times an event repeats itself in a given period. Sound waves and the electri- cal signals that represent sound waves in an audio circuit have repetitive patterns that range from a frequency of about 20 repetitions per second to about 20,000 repetitions per second. Sound is the vibration or combination of vibra- tions in this range of 20 to 20,000 repetitions per

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Contents MIC/LINE Mixer Safety Instructions LEVEL-SETTING Procedure Read thisInstant Mixing Other Nuggets of WisdomHOW to USE this Manual Plug for the Connectors SectionIntroduction Arcane Mysteries IlluminatedContents Hookup Diagrams Stereo EQ Video Setup Converting to Rackmount Mode Switching PositionsPhantom Power Patchbay DescriptionInterface MIC InputsLine Inputs TrimInsert Direct OUTSplit Monitoring AUX Send OutputsOutputs of the multitrack are then AUX Return Inputs SUB OutsPhones Output Tape OutputTape Input Power Connection Main InsertMain Outs Mono OutputPower Switch Power LEDPhantom Switch Phantom LEDClean Fade Channel Strip DescriptionFader Assign 1-2, 3-4, L-RSolo Solo LEDOL Mute LED During Normal AFL mode, the soloedMute PANStereo Sources Constant LoudnessLOW CUT AUX 1, 2, 3PRE ShiftOutput Section Description VLZ MIX ArchitectureSubgroup Faders Assign to Main MIXTape in Level Tape to Main MIXSource PhonesMent switches post-EQ Level SET LEDSolo Level Rude Solo LightMeters AUX TalkAUX Sends Master Meters vs. RealityAUX Sends Solo AUX Returns LevelEffects to Monitors Main MIX to Subs AUX RETPhns only AUX RET Returns SoloUL Warning Mackie DisclaimerAbout Jumpers Place the mixer upside-down on a dry, non- marring surfaceCR1604-VLZ Source Mod CR1604-VLZ Block Diagram OL FlickerGain LOW MID HighSpecifications Service Info TroubleshootingRepair Chorusing AssignAttenuate AuxDelay ConsoleCueing DBmEcho Effects devicesEQ curve EqualizationGain Gain stageGraphic EQ GroundInput module KneeLevel Line levelPhantom power Pan, pan potParametric EQ PeakingRCA phono jack-orRCA jack or phono jack RCA phono plugRegeneration ReturnVolume XLR connectorStereo Sweep EQXLR Connectors Appendix B Connections⁄4 TS Phone Plugs and Jacks ⁄4 TRS Phone Plugs and JacksSwitched 1⁄4 Phone Jacks RCA Plugs and JacksUnbalancing a Line Special Mackie ConnectionsUsing the Send Only on an Insert Jack TRS Send/Receive Insert JacksMults and Ys Balanced Lines Phantom Power do & DON’T Chart DON’TDo’s and Don’ts of Fixed Installations Don’t use hardware-store light dimmersFree T-SHIRT Offer Here are some guidelinesSession Date CR1604-VLZ0.5A