0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
ok that's kindof what I thought, now just have to listen to samples of what others had it at. thank you so much
Quote from: Lucidnight on March 31, 2013, 06:20:29 PMok that's kindof what I thought, now just have to listen to samples of what others had it at. thank you so muchI would suggest to NEVER use Bass Rolloff/HPF at the show. You can EASILY do that in your post production in your editing software
Quote from: F.O.Bean on March 31, 2013, 07:39:23 PMQuote from: Lucidnight on March 31, 2013, 06:20:29 PMok that's kindof what I thought, now just have to listen to samples of what others had it at. thank you so muchI would suggest to NEVER use Bass Rolloff/HPF at the show. You can EASILY do that in your post production in your editing software really? so I should just not bother with the switches and that won't hurt the recording and editing will level everything out?
Quote from: Lucidnight on March 31, 2013, 07:45:43 PMQuote from: F.O.Bean on March 31, 2013, 07:39:23 PMQuote from: Lucidnight on March 31, 2013, 06:20:29 PMok that's kindof what I thought, now just have to listen to samples of what others had it at. thank you so muchI would suggest to NEVER use Bass Rolloff/HPF at the show. You can EASILY do that in your post production in your editing software really? so I should just not bother with the switches and that won't hurt the recording and editing will level everything out?Make sure the switches are set to OFF so there is NO HPF being used. If it ends up boomy after the recording, you can EASILY take away the boom in post production
Found this in another thread - it is the bass roll off settings:desired Roll-off Frequency These switches set to the “open” position16Hz (no roll-off) 2,3,469Hz 1,495Hz 1,3107Hz 1,3,4160Hz 1,2195Hz 1,2,4888Hz 1,2,3
so does this mean that I turn switches 2,3,4 in both rows? There are two rows of four switches
Quote from: Lucidnight on April 02, 2013, 09:53:48 AMso does this mean that I turn switches 2,3,4 in both rows? There are two rows of four switchesYes, do the same thing in both rows. Each row of switches applies to a separate channel on your stereo recorder. You usually want them to have the same roll-off.