Subgroup faders, Assign to main mix, Main l-r mix fader – MACKIE CR1604 - VLZ Manuel d'utilisation

Page 22: Vlz mix architecture

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22

AUX

SENDS

STEREO AUX RETURNS

EFFECTS TO

MONITORS

TO AUX

SEND 2

TO AUX

SEND 1

1

2

PWR

PHAN

SOLO

SOLO

1

2

1

2

3

4

1

2

C-R / PHNS

ONLY

RETURNS

SOLO

MAIN MIX

TO SUBS

ASSIGN OPTIONS

1–2

3–4

U

O

O

+20

U

O

O

+20

U

O

O

+15

U

O

O

+15

U

O

O

+20

U

O

O

+20

U

O

O

+10

U

O

O

+10

LEFT RIGHT

PHONES

LAMP

12V

0.5A

TAPE IN

SOLO

RUDE
SOLO

LIGHT

C-R / PHONES

SUBS 3–4

SUBS 1–2

MAIN MIX

SOURCE

TAPE

TAPE TO

MAIN MIX

MAIN

L-R MIX

RIGHT

1

2

3

4

LEFT

RIGHT

LEFT

RIGHT

LEFT

RIGHT

LEFT

28

CLIP

10

7

4

2

2

0

4

7

10

20

30

ASSIGN TO MAIN MIX

LEVEL

SET

TM

MODE

(AFL)

LEVEL SET

NORMAL

(PFL)

CR1604-VLZ

16-CHANNEL MIC/LINE MIXER

U

O

O

+20

O

O

O

O

MAX

0 dB=0 dBu

MAX

dB

30

20

10

O

O

40
50

5

5

U

60

10

dB

30

20

10

O

O

40
50

5

5

U

60

10

At Mackie, audio quality is much more im-

portant than the price of wall warts. All of our
mixers now employ VLZ and built-in power
supplies that deliver more than enough cur-
rent, resulting in sonic specifications that
rival consoles upwards of $50,000!

SUBGROUP FADERS

As you might expect, these faders control the

levels of signals sent to the

SUB OUTS. All chan-

nels that are assigned to subgroups, not muted
and not turned fully down will appear at the
SUB OUTS. Unlike the MAIN OUT, the sub-
group signals do

not pass through an insert jack

on their way to the subgroup faders. That’s no
problem — should you want to send these sig-
nals through a serial effects processor, simply
patch from the

SUB OUTS to the effect’s input,

and from the effect’s output to whatever the fi-
nal destination is, usually a multitrack recorder.

The subgroup signals is off when its fader is

fully down, the “

U” marking is unity gain, and

fully up provides 10dB additional gain. Re-
member that if you’re treating two subgroups
as a stereo pair, subgroup

1 and 2 for example,

make sure that both subgroup faders “ride”
together, to maintain the left/right balance.

ASSIGN TO MAIN MIX

One popular use of the subgroups is to use

them as master faders for a group of channels
on their way to the

MAIN L-R MIX. Let’s say

you’ve got a drum kit hogging up seven channels
and you’re going to want to fade them out at a
different rate than the other channels. You don’t
want to try that with seven hands or seven fin-
gers, so just un-assign these channels from

L–R,

reassign them to subgroup

1–2, engage the AS-

SIGN TO MAIN MIX, LEFT on subgroup 1 and
the

ASSIGN TO MAIN MIX, RIGHT on subgroup

2. Now you can ride the entire stereo drum mix
with two faders —

1 and 2.

If you engage just one

ASSIGN TO MAIN

MIX switch per subgroup (LEFT or RIGHT),
the signal sent to the

MAIN L-R MIX will be

the same level as the

SUB OUTS. If you want

the subgroup to appear in the center of the
main mix, engage both the

ASSIGN TO MAIN

MIX, LEFT and ASSIGN TO MAIN MIX, RIGHT
switches. The signal will be sent to both sides,
and will be attenuated just enough to pre-
serve constant loudness

, just like the

channel

PAN knobs when set center.

OUTPUT SECTION DESCRIPTION

You’ve just learned about the

input channels and how the sig-
nals get in and out. The signals
come in via

MIC and LINE input

jacks, are manipulated by the
channels, and then sent to the
output section. In the output
section, things get a bit more
complicated, so put on your
thinking caps.

MAIN L-R MIX FADER

As the name implies, this

fader controls the levels of
signals sent to the

MAIN OUT

1

/

4

" TRS jacks

and

TAPE

OUTPUT RCA jacks . All
channels and

AUX RETURNs

that are assigned to the

MAIN

L-R MIX, not muted and not
turned fully down will appear
at the

MAIN OUT. Before the

main mix gets to this fader, the
signals pass through the

MAIN

INSERT .

The

MAIN L-R MIX signals

are off with the fader fully
down, the “

U” marking is unity

gain, and fully up provides
10dB additional gain. This ad-
ditional gain will typically
never be needed, but once
again, it’s nice to know it’s
there. The fader itself is a ste-
reo version of the channel and
subgroup faders — same su-
persmooth custom taper, same
dead silence when turned fully
down. This is the fader to pull
down at the end of the song

when you want “The Great Fade-Out.”

VLZ MIX

ARCHITECTURE

When designing a mixing

circuit, the lowest noise and
best crosstalk specs are

achieved by using Very Low Impedance (VLZ).
To implement VLZ in a mixer, the power supply
must be able to deliver plenty of current to the
circuitry. That’s why those “wall wart” mixers are
often noisy — they can’t power a VLZ circuit.

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