Phones knob, Left/right level meters, Rude solo light – MACKIE ONYX 1220I User Manual

Page 23: Owner's manual 23, Main mix talkback

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Owner's Manual

23

39. PHONES Knob

This controls the volume at the phones output, from

off to maximum gain.

WARNING: The headphone amp is loud, and
can cause permanent hearing damage. Even
intermediate levels may be painfully loud

with some headphones. BE CAREFUL! Always turn this
control all the way down before connecting headphones,
or pressing a solo switch [34], or doing anything new
that may affect the headphone volume. Then turn it up
slowly as you listen carefully.

40. LEFT/RIGHT Level Meters

These peak meters are made up of two columns of

twelve LEDs, with three colors to indicate different
ranges of signal level, traffi c light style. They range from
–30 at the bottom, to 0 in the middle, to +20 (CLIP) at
the top.

If no source [35, 36] is selected in the control room/

phones, and no channels are in solo, the meters won’t do
anything. To display signal levels, select one or more of
the sources. For example, press main mix [35] to show
the main mix level in the meters. While the listening
levels are controlled by the control room and phones
knobs, the meters indicate the source mix before these
knobs, giving you the real facts at all times, even if
you’re not listening at all.

When a channel is soloed, the left meter shows no

reading, and the right meter shows the level of that
channel’s signal level, pre-fader. The right meter's 0 dB
LED is labeled "level set" to show where the level should
be when adjusting a channel’s gain [21] in the solo
mode (as described in “Set the Levels” on page 3).

When 0 dBu (0.775 V) is at the main mix outputs, it

shows as 0 dB on the meters.

You can get a good mix with peaks fl ashing anywhere

between –20 and +10 dB on the meters. Most amplifi ers
clip at about +10 dBu, and some recorders aren’t so
forgiving either. For best real-world results, try to keep
your peaks between “0” and “+6.” Remember, audio
meters are just tools to help assure you that your levels
are “in the ballpark.” You don’t have to stare at them
(unless you want to).

41. RUDE SOLO Light

This large LED fl ashes when one or more channel solo

switches are engaged [34]. This acts as a reminder that
what you hear in the control room and headphones is
the soloed channel(s). If you forget you’re in solo mode,
you can easily be tricked into thinking that something
is wrong with your mixer. Hence, the rude solo light.
Please forgive its rudeness, it is only trying to help, and
wants to be your friend.

dB

30

20

10

40
50

5

5

U

60

10

O

O

10

dB

30

20

10

40
50

5

5

U

60

O

O

ALT 3/4

OL

-

20

SOLO

MUTE

TALKBACK

MAIN MIX

TALKBACK

AUX

1-2

PHONES

DESTINATION

LEVEL

O

O

MAX

SEND

INPUT

FW 1-2

LINE

POWER

MIC

MID

2.5kHz

LOW

80Hz

HIGH

12kHz

GAIN

U

+15

-15

U

+15

-15

U

+15

-15

+

20dB

-

20dB

U

AUX MASTER

2

1

SEND

RETURN

2

1

CTRL ROOM/PHONES

SOURCE

PHONES

CONTROL

ROOM

RUDE
SOLO

20

15

10

6

3

0

2

4

7

10

20

30

L

R

0dB=0dBu

LEVEL

SET

CLIP

PRE
POST

PRE
POST

RTN TO

AUX1

MAIN MIX

ALT 3-4

TAPE

FW 1-2

ASSIGN TO

MAIN MIX

MAX

O

O

MAX

O

O

+

15

O

O

+

15

O

O

+

10

O

O

+

10

O

O

AUX

2

1

L

R

PAN

MAX

O

O

MAX

O

O

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47

48

49

50

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35

36

37

38

39

41

40

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