sheikh al Dudeilan wrote:Hey, Trakstar, thanks for the heads up, but I happen to already know how a Dry-Wet mix knob works. What I meant with my post above was to ask for more precision, for some 'visual' feedback on how strong the two signals are and how the Dry-Wet [or separate Dry and Wet] mix knob is affecting them.Trakstar wrote:when you get a wet dry mix nob, slowly rotate from wet 100% to dry 100% and listen to the sound as the nob travels the duration. It goes from over compressed to dry signal, usually I set them around 60% when I want a more natural sound, it adds to a balance of a more natural feel than just having a signal that can be squashed too much, especially when it comes to stuff like final mixes. It can also let the audio material breathe a little too and when you have a lot of bass frequencies combined with the hi pass sidechain you will understand when you try it out and listen
I can be as intuitive as necessary, but sometimes it just helps to have more control and some visual feedback - numeric displays, for example.
yeah, ill bear that in mind for future reference.
(memo to self_
Sheikh al dudeilan is not as thick as I thought)
PS_ what were you meaning concerning visual feedback, in percentage or decibels perhaps, or even waveform display

