But, he contends, that's not all that an analog summer can do to help the sound. Another important contention for the rivals of the digital-summing debate is that latency occurs when internal processing is introduced, resulting in phase shifting or outright mistiming of tracks. Muth is adamant that analog summing helps get rid of latency problems. “People may point to their automatic latency controls, but I've watched people mix this way, and it takes them 15 minutes to figure what latency is on which channel,” he says. “And things change again when they make changes to the processing. With a 2-Bus, I can say, ‘I have a stem mix, and I want to compress it.’ I patch in a pair of compressors, and in about 15 seconds, I have it dialed in — all without delays.”