pan, pan pot
Short for panoramic potentiometer. A pan pot is used to position (or even move back and forth) a monaural sound source in a stereo mixing field by adjusting the source’s volume between the left and right channels. Our brains sense stereo position by hearing this dif- ference in loudness when the sound strikes each ear, taking into account time delay, spec- trum, ambient reverberation and other cues.
parametric EQ
A “fully” parametric EQ is an extremely powerful equalizer that allows smooth, con- tinuous control of each of the three primary EQ parameters (frequency, gain, and band- width) in each section independently. “Semi” parametric EQs allow control of fewer param- eters, usually frequency and gain (i.e., they have a fixed bandwidth, but variable center frequency and gain).
peaking
The opposite of dipping, of course. A peak is an EQ curve that looks like a hill, or a peak. Peaking with an equalizer amplifies a band of frequencies.
PFL
An acronym for Pre Fade Listen. Broadcast- ers would call it cueing. Sound folks call it being able to solo a channel with the fader down.
phantom power
A system of providing electrical power for condenser microphones (and some electronic pickup devices) from the sound mixer. The system is called phantom because the power is carried on standard microphone audio wiring in a way that is “invisible” to ordinary dynamic microphones. Mackie mixers use standard +48 volt DC power, switchable on or off. Most qual- ity condenser microphones are designed to use +48 VDC phantom power. Check the manufacturer’s recommendations.
Generally, phantom power is safe to use with
phasing
A delay effect, where the original signal is mixed with a short (0 to 10 msec) delay. The
time of the delay is slowly varied, and the combination of the two signals results in a dra- matic moving
phone jack
Ever see those old telephone switchboards with hundreds of jacks and patch cords and plugs? Those are phone jacks and plugs, now used widely with musical instruments and au- dio equipment. A phone jack is the female connector, and we use them in 1⁄4" two- conductor (TS) and
phone plug
The male counterpart to the phone jack, right above.
phono jack
See RCA phono jack.
phono plug
See RCA phono plug.
post-fader
A term used to describe an aux send (usually) that is connected so that it is affected by the setting of the associated channel fader. Sends connected this way are typically (but not always) used for effects. See
pot, potentiometer
In electronics, a variable resistor that varies the potential, or voltage. In audio, any rotary or slide control.
pre-fader
A term used to describe an aux send (usually) that is connected so that it is not af- fected by the setting of the associated channel fader. Sends connected this way are typically (but not always) used for monitors (foldback). See
proximity effect
The property of many directional micro- phones to accentuate their bass response when the
Q
A way of stating the bandwidth of a filter or equalizer section. An EQ with a Q of .75 is broad and smooth, while a Q of 10 gives a nar- row, pointed response curve. To calculate the value of Q, you must know the center fre- quency of the EQ section and the frequencies at which the upper and lower skirts fall 3dB below the level of the center frequency. Q
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