I am working on the Quantum 338 console. During a virtual sound check I set up a loop of my Snare Top , and Snare Bottom from a recent session then engaged the Mustard EQ on both channels. I selected the all pass option on the snare bottom channel. When I sweep the all pass frequency I am hearing no difference at all. Did I set this up incorrectly? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks so much!
For clarity. Phase is purely a relative measurement of time. It is relative to frequency. Phase itself has nothing to do with having multiple concurrent signals, that would be a phase relationship between two signals but not phase itself. Secondly, the all pass filter being measured in the transfer function actually incurs 360deg of phase shift, not 180.
It’s not called a phase button. It’s a polarity button and has always been. I can’t believe DiGiCo is calling a polarity button a 180 phase. One is polarity +/- and the other is time dependent.
This video is great, thanks for finally explaining it like a human being lol
This was an extremely insightful video, now I really got the allpass filter! Thank you very much!
I wouldn't mind if this topic was expanded on in a longer video
I am working on the Quantum 338 console. During a virtual sound check I set up a loop of my Snare Top , and Snare Bottom from a recent session then engaged the Mustard EQ on both channels. I selected the all pass option on the snare bottom channel. When I sweep the all pass frequency I am hearing no difference at all. Did I set this up incorrectly? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks so much!
Make sure your ears are clean.
7:08 for audio demonstration
For clarity.
Phase is purely a relative measurement of time. It is relative to frequency. Phase itself has nothing to do with having multiple concurrent signals, that would be a phase relationship between two signals but not phase itself.
Secondly, the all pass filter being measured in the transfer function actually incurs 360deg of phase shift, not 180.
thank You!
Excelente. Gracias.
Niiiice
Great demo Molly 😎
Wow! This is great
It’s not called a phase button. It’s a polarity button and has always been. I can’t believe DiGiCo is calling a polarity button a 180 phase. One is polarity +/- and the other is time dependent.
She said it's "commonly referred to" and subsequently corrected the terminology to "polarity button". You should chill out.
@@conorm2524 excuse me? did I say something wrong?
word
no, it's noy commonly referred to.. @@conorm2524