Page 19 — clock source/clock rate – ALESIS QS8.1 User Manual

Page 53

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Part 4: Basic Operation

50

QS7.1/QS8.1 Reference Manual

BOTH sets the sliders up so they control your QS and send MIDI data. This is the
factory default setting.

PAGE 19 — CLOCK SOURCE/CLOCK RATE

This parameter determines the “sample playback rate” which the QS will use. If
you’re not using the QS’s digital audio output to send the signal from your QS to
some other piece of gear, you should leave this parameter alone.

But if you are using the digital audio output capability of the QS, then you will
find this page of the Global Edit Mode to be very useful. There are four different
settings here:

Int 48kHz (the default), Int 44.1k, Ext 48kHz and Ext

44.1k.

The concept of a “clock rate” is based upon the fact that every sound inside the QS
is a digital recording of something. What a digital recording does is take a bunch of
“snapshots” of an audio signal. These “snapshots” are then played back in order to
reconstruct the original sound. The process is something like the relationship
between one frame from a videotape and the “playing back in order” of a bunch of
video frames in order to “recreate” the original scene.

And in the same way that the video frames blend together to create the perception
of motion, so the audio samples in the QS are played back so quickly and so
seamlessly that they appear to the human ear to be one sound. The rate at which
samples are played back is determined by the Clock function.

When set to either Internal setting, the QS uses its own internal sample clock as a
reference for playing back the sampled sounds in your Program or Mix. But in a
digital recording environment, it is often necessary for a piece or several pieces of
gear to be able to “turn over control” to one “master” clock signal, so that all of the
gear can play back their “snapshots” at the same rate.

Hence the “External” clock settings of the QS. Note that if you set the QS to one of
the two External clock settings without hooking it up to an external clock, it will
make a sort of “hissing” or “sprinkler” noise. This is because it is looking for
something to provide it with a clock signal and it isn’t finding it.

So here’s a brief rundown on when to use which setting:

Int48kHz. This is the default setting for the internal clock. It will have an almost
imperceptibly wider frequency response than 44.1 kHz. Use it if recording via the
QS’s digital output to an ADAT-XT which is using a sample rate of 48 kHz and
there is no Alesis BRC in the system.

Int44.1k. The one to choose if you are recording digitally to an ADAT-XT which is
using a sample rate of 44.1 kHz and there is no Alesis BRC in the system.

Ext48kHz. If you are recording to an ADAT-XT in the digital domain and are using
an Alesis BRC, connect a BNC-to-BNC cable between the BRC’s 48 kHz Clock Out
and the QS’s [48 kHz IN]. Then select the Ext48kHz setting for the QS’s clock
setting.

Ext44.1k. Same as above, but if the BRC has been set to 44.1 kHz (by having been
“Pitched Down” to -147), select the Ext44.1k clock setting for the QS.

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