Soundtoys PanMan User Manual

Page 6

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6

level, and possible clipping which may or may not sound so good depending

on the switch setting and what your ears like to hear.

Analog Mode Switch (Distortion/Overdrive Characteristics)

The analog mode toggle switch and flavor button allow you to choose how

PanMan will distort or "saturate" as the signal input increases, which is

more noticeable at high signal levels.

Analog Mode

In ‘analog’ mode, PanMan will saturate in the nice, warm and friendly

manner similar to the way real analog gear responds. The analog setting

adds a certain amount of distortion at all signal levels. The Analog setting

sounds really good but keep in mind the "Analog" setting eats up

significantly more DSP resources. Sorry, no free DSP lunch here!

Digital Mode

When the analog mode switch is off, PanMan is in ‘digital’ mode. In this

mode, higher signal levels will clip in the typically nasty, crunchy digital

way. This too can be desirable depending on what effect you’re trying to

achieve. Lower level sounds are left pretty much unchanged and sound

spic-n-span clean. Also note that the digital setting uses significantly less

DSP horsepower than the analog setting. (What are horses doing in my

computer anyway?)

Needless to say you should experiment with both settings using various

types of source material and cranking the input levels up and down to hear

what it all sounds like. A fun and educational exercise!

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