G
gatholonobs
New member
Anyone know how to clean dirty pots on a BBE processor? I've taken it apart and sprayed what I can access with comp air but the pots seem to be sealed and inaccessible.
'Essential' is a bit of a stretch here. Simple things such as mic placement, instrument selection, and a little knowledge of EQ can go a long way.soundchaser59 said:You guys are too hard on BBE. Maybe because so many people just over use the things?? The maximizer used correctly is an essential tool in any home or semi-pro rack.
As if drum machines weren't bright enough.soundchaser59 said:The best use I've ever heard for a BBE is on a drum kit. It simply brings a drum machine to life. I'll never mix without it now that I know what it can do....
The BBE only does one thing to the highs and one thing to the lows. Are you trying to say that everything you record has one (or both) of these specific problems? That doesn't seem very likely.soundchaser59 said:Perhaps, I do undertand why you say this, but after toying with both EQ and BBE, I've learned that the BBE is my first choice since EQ adds to the signal levels and forces me to readjust my mix. The BBE does not add or take anything away from the source sound. I always try the maximizer first, before I try EQ on my mix.
Farview said:Have you tried dousing it in lighter fluid and setting it on fire?
Even if you actually believe that all speakers have the same type of time alignment problem, such that you could fix it all with one knob, you couldn't think that while you were mixing, you are aligning the frequencies so that it will be heard accuratley on every speaker system out there.soundchaser59 said:The maximizer is based on what I would describe as frequency-band-dependent delays intended to "time align" the sound coming from the speakers in order to compensate for something akin to phase interference inherent in speaker fidelity. I dont work for BBE, so I dont know the dazzling technical explanation for it, but "time aligned sound" will suffice for me.