Gain Sharing Mixer Control Panel

Video Transcript

0:08
Welcome back. Let’s continue from where we left off.
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Alright now let’s look at what’s happening in the Mixer itself. These are our four inputs,
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each has an LED at the top that tells us whether or not the gate is open. If the gate is not open,
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that line isn’t being mixed into the output. Right now Paul, George, and Ringo are all open, but John,
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he’s floating in and out because he’s talking so low down at -20 decibels
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that sometimes he’s gated open, and sometimes he’s not.
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Now when more channels are open, each one will be attenuated a bit more
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to keep the output level at unity gain – it’s sharing the gain across all the inputs,
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that’s why it’s called the Gain-Sharing Mixer. All coming together, right?
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Alright now each of these inputs also has a Priority Gain, this is how you compensate for quiet speakers.
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So John is really quiet, we can turn up his channel’s gain so that now when he’s speaking,
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you can see that his gate is gated open.
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Now they’re all speaking right now, and you can see that Ringo is really loud
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and he’s getting the majority of the gain, so they’re all in the mix.
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But let’s find out what happens when some of them stop talking.
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Let’s take out John and Ringo – you can see how Paul and George are being given more of the gain now.
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In fact if only Paul is talking, then the mixer gives him even less attenuation.
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but then they all start talking, and all they all start arguing
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and you can see how the gain is dropped across the board. This way the output is never going to clip,
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but when only one or two people are talking they’re given full volume,
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and nobody has to be riding the microphone gains because it’s all done automatically by this digital mixer.
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Now let’s look really quickly at some of the other options in the Mixer’s Setup now.
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This Mix section lets you mute the entire channel, or change the gain on the entire mixed output.
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The Open Threshold determines when the gate will open. If a channel’s Gain is above the number here,
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then the gate opens – this lets you adjust how sensitive you want the mixer to be in order to open a gate.
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So if I raise this threshold, their gates start to close
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because they don’t have enough gain to reach the threshold. We’ll set that back down to where it was.
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The Depth determines how much attenuation is applied to closed channels,
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so you’ll see that if I have George start speaking softly, then his gate is closed,
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and the Depth of -40 dB is how much attenuation is applied to his channel.
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The Rest Gain sets a level for all channels when nobody is talking
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that way it won’t be totally dead in between speakers so it doesn’t sound flat.
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So we can see that by having everyone start to talk very softly
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and you’ll notice that all of their channels are floating at around -30 dB.
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The threshold level lets you compensate for background noise,
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you can set this just above the background noise of the room to keep that from opening up your gates.
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And these next few knobs adjust what happens when a gate opens or closes
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the Attack Time is sort of a fade-in time, or how long it takes to open up the channel.
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So if I set that really high, then you’ll notice that when George is loud enough to be opened
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it takes a little bit for it to apply.
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The hold time is how long the channel stays open after the speaker stops talking.
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If I put this really high, let’s set it up to three seconds, it will take three seconds for the gate to close.
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Let’s have George stop talking. One-one-thousand, two-one-thousand, three-one-thousand.
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That’s how long it takes for the channel to turn off
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that’s really useful if you know someone has long pauses in the middle of their sentences.
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You don’t want them to be turned off mid-sentence.
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And finally this Release Time is the fade-out, that adjusts how long it takes for a channel to close.
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Oh and here’s the Detector Time, as we mentioned earlier,
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this knob shows up and lets you adjust how long a noise has to be for it to count as an input.
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Finally – we’re almost there –the Side Chain.
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Like I said this lets you determine what type of noise opens the gate
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you can set the frequency really high so that only higher-pitched noises will open the gate
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now remember this doesn’t affect the line at all,
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it just says what the mixer is looking for to determine if the channel will open.
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There are some presets here, or you can adjust it yourself,
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or if you don’t want to use it right now just hit the bypass button.
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That’s the Gain-Sharing Automatic Mixer.
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Alright let’s break real quick right here, and come back for the next part.