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EQ | U | HI |
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Most of the root and lower harmonics that define a sound are located in the
The HI EQ provides you up to 15dB boost or cut at 12kHz, and it is also flat at the detent. Use it to add sizzle to cymbals, an overall sense of transparency, or an edge to keyboards, vocals, gui- tar and bacon frying. Turn it down a little to reduce sibilance or to mask tape hiss.
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With too much EQ, you can screw things up royally. We’ve designed a lot of boost and cut into each equalizer circuit because we know everyone will occasionally need that. But if you max the EQ on every channel, you’ll get mix mush. Equalize subtly and use the left sides of the knobs (cut), as well as the right (boost). If you find yourself repeatedly using full boost or cut, consider altering the sound source, such as placing a mic differently, trying a different kind of mic, changing the strings, or gargling.
LOW CUT
The LOW CUT switch, often referred to as a high pass filter (all depends on how you look at it), cuts bass frequencies below 75Hz at a rate of 18dB per octave. This ain’t no
We recommend that you use LOW CUT on ev- ery sound source except kick drum, bass guitar, bassy synth patches, or recordings of earth- quakes. These aside, there isn’t much down there that you want to hear, and filtering it out makes the low stuff you do want much more crisp and tasty. Not only that, but low cut can help reduce the possibility of feedback in live situations, and it helps to conserve amplifier power.
With LOW CUT, you can safely boost LOW EQ . Many times, bass shelving eq can really benefit voices. Trouble is, adding LOW EQ also boosts the subsonic debris: Stage rumble, mic handling clunks, wind noise and breath pops. LOW CUT removes all that debris so you can boost the LOW EQ without frying your woofer. Here’s a frequency curve of LOW EQ combined
with LOW CUT:
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AUX 1, 2, 3, & 4
These four knobs tap a portion of each channel’s signal, mix them together and send them to the AUX SEND outputs . They are off when turned fully down, deliver unity gain at the center detent, and can provide up to 15dB of gain turned fully up. Chances are you’ll never need this extra gain, but it’s nice to know it’s there if you do.
The AUX SEND output are then patched to parallel effects processor inputs or stage monitor amp inputs. AUX SENDS 1 and 2 lev- els are controlled not only by the channel’s AUX knobs, but also by the AUX SEND mas- ter knobs .
AUX SENDS can also be used to generate separate mixes for recording or
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