J
JackReynolds 983
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Does anyone have clean, loud settings suggestions for a Cutting Edge Unity 2000. I have the older one without the jog wheel. We're looking to make a CHR sound as great as we can with this unit. THANKS!
JackReynolds 983 said:Does anyone have clean, loud settings suggestions for a Cutting Edge Unity 2000. I have the older one without the jog wheel. We're looking to make a CHR sound as great as we can with this unit. THANKS!
I tried one of these back in the 80's & even with tech support's guidance, I could never arrive at a setting that didn't have objectionable sibilance distortion on a live microphone. We went back to the barefoot Optimod 8100A & the sibilance issue was not there, so I'm certain it was something particular to the 2000. For a very long time, that item poisoned my opinion of their products. Fortunately, I gave them another chance when Omnia 5 AM's & Omnia 6 FM's started falling into my lap. They make fantastic products today...Please let us know how your quest for a loud clean sound comes out with the 2000...especially in terms of how clean the on air microphone sounds when speaking a word with strong "s" sounds in it.JackReynolds 983 said:Does anyone have clean, loud settings suggestions for a Cutting Edge Unity 2000. I have the older one without the jog wheel. We're looking to make a CHR sound as great as we can with this unit. THANKS!
stace said:True True. Although I'm using one 2000i with the jog wheel the issue remains the same.
I actually really like the concept of the Unity. The way the AGC goes into wait mode, the the above / below unity gain I think is something Frank should have played around with a little more...I guess he had his reason for moving to flat out 'gain reduction'.
I also reduced attack time on high and presence band limiters to reduce high end harmonic distortion issues. What I found would happen alot was drums and voices in general sounded very clippy and inconsistant. More limiter action was the fix. Also don't drive the mid band limiter too hard!
Another issue was when the unit gates. The levellers return to unity gain, but the limiters carry on releasing all gain. And if you have no gain reduction in the high bands, and alot in the mid-low bands (as in most presets) the spectral ballance during passages that drop below the gate often, such as live voice wanders.
Long story short, reduce attack time on high and pres limiters, and reduce drive to bass and mid limiters. Make up loss of loudness with a quicker release time on those lower bands.
FFoti1 said:The AGC does not operate on a flat out gain reduction platform. All of the AGCs are based upon a fixed gain platform, and then increase or decrease gain based upon the average value of the incoming audio to the AGC section. The 'wait' function is like a window between the gain increase and decrease modes.
stace said:Sorry Frank I meant I like the concept of above and below unity. What I was curious about was, what made you change to using 'gain reduction' in later processors?
I would like the opportunity to lower the 'gate' on the presence and 'high' bands without lowering it on the mid and low bands like in the Omnias...is this possible? I find some material can initially sound dull but the high end kind of wakes up when the gate is released. This is why I prefer the band coupling idea on the high bands. The only gate control I know of is one that lowers the gate level on all of the 'levellers'...
FFoti1 said:The concept grew out of the Unity design, but with much more precision, and better sounding control.
-Frank Foti
audiophile. said:In my experience the Unity blows the doors off a FM 3 Turbo...