I made this very very simple device inspired by an article in the recent Sound on Sound issue. There they introduced a tool (Crossfeed-eq) that simulates a regular monitoring environment by 'bouncing' some the left signal to the right and vice versa. I mimicked the thing in this cross-feed module. The idea is that this presents a monitor-like sound via your headphones. Handy to do some mixing late at night (my usual hobby time).
hope you find it useful
Using your headphones to prepare a mix.
Using your headphones to prepare a mix.
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Last edited by breitner on Fri Jan 26, 2007 1:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: [b]Using your headphones to prepare a mix.[/b]
thanks this should be useful for me too....breitner wrote:I made this very very simple device inspired by an article in the recent Sound on Sound issue. There they introduced a tool (Crossfeed-eq) that simulates a regular monitoring environment by 'bouncing' some the left signal to the right and vice versa. I mimicked the thing in this cross-feed module. The idea is that this presents a monitor-like sound via your headphones. Handy to do some mixing late at night (my usual hobby time).
hope you find it useful
long nights....-.

breitner, the delay ranges in this patch seem too extreme for the purpose. If a waveform only takes a few ms to circle your head then the perfect delay range for this would be 0 - 10 maybe 12 ms. I can set up the specific ranges needed in a device, as a new DelayM module needs to be built from smaller sdk modules anyway.
Hi Shroomz,Shroomz wrote:I've actually decided that I don't know enough about the theory involved in this, so I might build it once I know more. In the meantime maybe someone else that fully understands the theory will build it.
as stated earlier, all the inspiration comes from the SOS magazine. Their january issue runs a nice paper on headphone mixing. On p 82 the author describes a freeware tool (www.ohl.to/audio/crossfeed_eq/crossfeed_eq.zip). I tried to rebuild the core part of that tool. So, if you need more info on the settings and exact ranges, please have a look.
Thanks for the input, here is a second version with the flexor delays insideShroomz wrote:Ok, I've had a look at the crossfeedEQ app running in savi-host & the delay range is 0 - 20 samples. If you replace the delay in your patch with a sample delay I think it might be much more usefull. Thanks for the patch btw
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