it woud be nice to have delay for the aux outputs for delayline speaker
+1 yes please - this would be very good to have as there are many applications for a mixer like this in a setting with delay speakers. Input channel delay would also be very useful too (especially for things like syncing audio to video playback).
- 1, please make this possible
Not in front of an iPad now but I thought that was already on the app?
You have output delay on all out’s inc L&R.
That’s what I thought:)
(for anyone who hasn’t found it and comes across this thread - it’s in the CONFIG / OUTPUTS screen when an output socket is selected )
thanks Keith! Are there plans to add input delay on channel inputs?
@Mat_Turra
I’m afraid not, this is a hardware (core-design) restriction, so not a case of simply implementing in firmware.
Thanks,
Keith.
Hello Forum,
Output Delay to Aux on CQ 12T has a decaying ‘tail’ that tails off repeating the input.
- is this by design?
I can not find any parameters to control the decaying tail to make this a dry out so that I can delay a speaker that is placed at a distance from the mains.
Has anyone found a way to make the Output Day to Aux be a dry output?
I already spent 2 hours going though the settings:
- muted all other fx
- turned down the knobs on all of the fx
- gone through every setting there is for an answer
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks.
Thank you for following up so quick.
I went through all of the Fx options independently and made sure all fx were inactive, fx faders to ip’s and op’s all down and also muted for good measure.
The Output Delay, as depicted and circled in red on this picture is precisely what I am setting to apply a delay to coordinated distant-outside speakers on an Aux. The delay works but it has a decaying repetition of the input, trailing off, after correctly delaying the initial output.
ie.
I say:
“CHECK ONE TWO”
System waits 500ms
output:
"CHECK ONE TWO … check one two … check one two … " etc quieter and quieter
~trailing off
It should not be repeating decay of an input over and over.
Just a dry signal that outputs with a few millisecond delay before incident-output so that the sound from the primary incident speakers catch-up to the coordinated speakers at a proximal distance.
This really should be easy, no? …but I seem to be missing a detail on the utility of this feature.
Thanks for the attention on my technical challenge.
Hi @orbital try muting your mic after the first “Check one two” you may have created your own feedback loop by letting the amplified sound back into the microphone and then the loop starts…