![]() ![]() You can move the graphical band nodes outside of the screen.The sides are shaded which makes the A and B bands sometimes look disabled at a glance.This means constantly screwing around with it only to just see the peaks (and often not see the whole picture if you want it) The Analyzer only shows you about 18db at a time, and you have to manually tune it.(Though, if you don’t have anything yet, it’s very welcome) That is great, but it’s nothing that you can’t get with products from other makers. The bell bands can get very, very narrow. It makes the “search and destroy” workflow a bit easier. There’s a “search” band that turns the current band in to a bandpass filter with boost capabilities. The analyzer is similar to x42 EQ in that it is both fast and it has high resolution in the low bands. They allow steeper slopes than bands 1-5 in the high/low-pass modes. Maybe the original EQ worked like that, but come on.īands A and B are only high/low-pass or bells. Each band has a specific range that it can be moved between. It operates basically like any digital EQ except with some limitations. I can’t say if it sounds like the original Series 10 EQ, but I can say that it doesn’t seem to be anything special. The GUI looks quite nice, but how does it fair? This is the plugin version of the Series 10 digital equalizer that works fully with control surfaces. FREE with the upgrade from MB4 32c to MB5 32c. ![]()
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