Figure 42. Monitorizer.
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Head Delay. Sets the delay of a speaker to reach the opposite ear. Settings between 70% and 80% are typical.
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Room. Increase to add subtle room reflections.
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Dampen. Increase to emulate the high-frequency loss in the signals arriving in your ears from the opposite speakers.
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Amount. Increases the Monitorizer effect.
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A/B. Enables the Monitorizer when lit, and allows for easy comparisons without having to adjust knobs.
1. Insert a new stereo bus or Aux track and name it Monitorizer.
2. Assign the bus/Aux track output to the same output that the Master bus is assigned to (this is typically an audio interface hardware output), and set the Volume control to 0.
3.
4.
5. Click Anderton Collection > Processors, then drag the Monitorizer preset to the Monitorizer bus/Aux track’s FX Rack.
6. Create a post-fader send in the Master bus, and assign the send to the Monitorizer bus/Aux track. Set the Send Level to around -3.
Note: Paradoxically, sometimes it sounds like the stereo imaging is actually wider with the Monitorizer, especially with high Room and Head Delay settings. However, it’s often just a more satisfying stereo image because it doesn’t sound as exaggerated.
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