
philbagg
Just Killing Time
It may be the case for whatever DAW you're using, but it's absolutely not true for the one I use.
You seem very secretive about your DAW

It may be the case for whatever DAW you're using, but it's absolutely not true for the one I use.
What DAW do you use? I am using Cubase.
So, if I understand it correctly, you're turning a mono channel into a stereo channel, by "adding channels". So, I wasn't that far off from the truth when I said that inserting a stereo effect into a MONO CHANNEL will make that effect mono.The signal path is something like on a stereo input of a mixing board, that is, it can act as two separate channels through to the balance control. If you plug a single source into the "Left (Mono)" it gets sent to both the Left and Right paths in the stereo channel, but you don't hear it as stereo when the balance is centered. Say you put that mono signal into a stereo reverb box before the mixer. If the box is configured to pass the dry input signal to both outputs equally and mix it with the L and R of the stereo reverb then the dry is "centered" while the stereo reverb is spread out. Now hook that up to the stereo input of a mixer. You can use the channel's balance control to move the whole stereo image left or right. This is done simply by lowering the right to move the image left, or lowering the left to move the image right.
In a software mixer you have more flexibility. What I use gives me the pan/balance option to "add channels". It's like putting a stereo signal into two mono channels panned hard left and right, then panning one over to the other side. That's different than a normal balance control which lowers one side to favor the other, losing the information in the "off" side. Using "add channels" retains all the info (except for cancellation issues). Imagine a stereo keyboard with a ping-pong delay bouncing between L and R. If you "pan" it hard left with a balance control you lose half of your ping-pong effect. In "add channels" mode the right ping-pongs (the pongs?) move across toward the left channel.
Thanx. That's what I thought.noisewreck said:You're right. It will be summed to mono.
What DAW do you use? I am using Cubase.
So, if I understand it correctly, you're turning a mono channel into a stereo channel, by "adding channels". So, I wasn't that far off from the truth when I said that inserting a stereo effect into a MONO CHANNEL will make that effect mono.
In Sonar (and I thought all DAWS) it is simple to make a mono track stereo. A click of the mouse achieves it. Commonly things like amp sims will prefer a stereo track if they do room or ambiance modeling.
No, adding a stereo effect turns that channel into a stereo channel from that point in the path