Part v–effects – Teac SX-1 Reference Manual User Manual

Page 116

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Part V–Effects

116

TASCAM SX-1

Reference Manual

Proximity control in combination with some appropri-
ately programmed reverb will allow you to create the
same effect, with the additional bonus of being able to
control the exact nature of the room tone.

Preserve Source

The Preserve Source controls

allows you to split your audio into its bass and treble
ranges and process each range separately. This lets
you create hybrid mics that combine the bass charac-
teristics of one mic and the treble characteristics of
another. One of the two mics will be your actual
source mic and the other can be selected from any of
the available models.
Say, for example, that you have a mic whose bass
response is great for a particular track, but whose tre-
ble response just doesn’t sound right. With this fea-
ture you can preserve the bass response of your
source mic while replacing its treble characteristics
with that of any of the modeled mics.
Here’s how it works:

1

Make all the appropriate settings in the

Source

Mic

section. (Do not select

Bypass

unless you

are going for some special effect, as it will
defeat the normal function of this feature).

2

Choose the other mic for your hybrid and
make all the appropriate settings in the

Modeled Mic

section. (Again, do not select

Bypass

unless you are going for some special effect.)

3

3) In the

Preserve Source

section, click on either

the

Bass

or

Treble

button (its associated “LED”

will light) depending on whether you want to
preserve the bass or treble characteristics of
your source mic.

There are four possible states of the two Pre-
serve Source buttons. Here’s what each does
(
` = LED lit, < = LED not lit):

Preserve Source: Bass

<

, Treble

<

With nei-

ther button pressed, frequency splitting does not take
place and the Microphone Modeler operates in its
normal manner according to the settings in the

Source

and

Modeled Mic

sections.

2) Preserve Source: Bass

`

, Treble

<

With

the

Bass

button pressed, the source mic’s bass charac-

teristics are allowed through unchanged while the
treble characteristics are neutralized. Then, at the
model end, only the model’s treble characteristics are
applied to the signal. The net effect is that you get the
source mic’s bass characteristics and the modeled
mic’s treble characteristics.

Preserve Source: Bass

<

, Treble

`

This, as

you’ve probably guessed, is the reverse of the previ-
ous arrangement. With the

Treble

button pressed, the

source mic’s bass characteristics are neutralized
while the treble characteristics are allowed through
unchanged. Then, at the model end, only the model’s
bass characteristics are applied to the signal. The net
effect is that you get the source mic’s treble charac-
teristics and the modeled mic’s bass characteristics

Preserve Source: Bass

`

, Treble

`

With

both buttons pressed, both the source’s bass and tre-
ble characteristics are allowed through unchanged
and no model is applied to either range. This is
equivalent to selecting

Bypass

in both the

Source Mic

and

Modeled Mic

menus, with the exception that the

Proximity

controls for both the source and modeled

mics remain active.

Tube Saturation

The

Tube Saturation

section is

designed to model the distortion that is typical of a
high-quality tube pre-amp.
When tube pre-amps are operated in their linear
range, there is virtually no signal distortion and their
audio qualities are essentially identical to solid state
pre-amps. However, it commonly occurs that tran-
sients exceed the linear voltage range, resulting in
distortion. The distortion characteristics of a vacuum
tube pre-amp are vastly different from that of solid
state amplifiers and are often described as adding a
certain “warmth” to a sound (in contrast to what is
often described as the “brittleness” of the solid state
sound).
The amount of tube saturation effect applied to your
audio is controlled by the

Tube Saturation Drive

control

in combination with the Input Gain control.
The

Drive

control determines the amplification factor

of the modeled tube pre-amp with the numeric dis-
play indicating the amplification in dB. At 0 dB, no
distortion occurs, even for full amplitude (+1 or -1)
signal levels. These levels represent the “rails” of the
amplifier. As the

Drive

is increased, the amplification

is increased. Any regions of the signal that increase
beyond the rails generate distortion. (But instead of
the usual ugly digital clipping, they are distorted the
same way the tube pre-amp would distort the sound.)

TIP

If you want to add tube saturation distortion without
otherwise affecting your sound, set both the Source Mic
and Modeled Mic menus to Bypass.

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