dobro
Well-known member
Hi. I've got a question about mixing in software.
I take a track, and duplicate it so that I can pan and get a stereo field with it. Now I've got two tracks. With two tracks, the volume's louder. Fair enough.
But if the stereo field I create with those two tracks is really narrow, like if I pan it 10% left and 20% right, the volume's way louder, and sometimes distortion crops up. But if I create a really wide stereo field, say 50% left and 75% right, the volume's much lower, and no distortion. It's as if the available sonic energy is spread out over a greater width and so the volume's lower overall. Have I got that right? Is that what's happening?
I take a track, and duplicate it so that I can pan and get a stereo field with it. Now I've got two tracks. With two tracks, the volume's louder. Fair enough.
But if the stereo field I create with those two tracks is really narrow, like if I pan it 10% left and 20% right, the volume's way louder, and sometimes distortion crops up. But if I create a really wide stereo field, say 50% left and 75% right, the volume's much lower, and no distortion. It's as if the available sonic energy is spread out over a greater width and so the volume's lower overall. Have I got that right? Is that what's happening?

The center lift is only for panning - it doesn't effect the balancing problem when you mono a stereo mix. In a stereo mix your center panned instr go up 3 db relative to the l/r panned instruments - unfortunatley that's the stereo biz but if you are panning say - a gtr for effect - you don't want it to rise as you go thru center therefore consoles like the mackie dip as you pass thru center.