users manual

833 User Guide
42
Frame rate
The rate at which video or motion picture images are recorded or 
played back, measured in frames-per second (FPS). All audio and 
video devices must be running at the same frame rate to keep audio 
and video synchronized. Timecode frame rates are either an integer 
or non-integer value. Integer values include 24, 25, and 30 FPS. Non-
integer frame rates include 23.976 and 29.97, and 29.97 drop FPS.
Frequency
The period at which a wave oscillates, measured in hertz (Hz). 
Frequencies audible to humans range from 20 Hz for very low 
frequency signals to 20 kHz for very high frequency signals.
Gain
An increase (or decrease with negative gain) in the level of an audio 
signal. Gain can be applied in several locations, to both analog 
and digital signals. In a eld mixer the microphone preamplier 
provides a substantial amount of gain at the trim to raise the low 
level microphone signal to a usable signal in the mixer. Gain is also 
available at the fader. Gain of digital signals or line level analog 
signals is often limited. Unity gain is gain stage that neither adds or 
subtracts level from a signal.
Headphone monitor
Often a separate bus with a dedicated headphone volume control, 
the headphone monitor typically is normalled to the main left/right 
output bus of a mixer. Headphone sources can often be selected 
among soloed tracks or buses. In some products complex headphone 
monitoring of MS Stereo, LR stereo, and ambisonic sources is 
available.
High pass lter (audio)
Also referred to as a low-cut lter, this circuit reduces the amount of 
low frequency content in an audio signal. A HPF is particularly useful 
when recording speech since the human voice does not generate 
appreciable energy at low frequencies. The HPF reduces non-speech 
signals such as environmental noise, wind noise, and microphone 
handling noise, improving the intelligibility of speech and reducing low 
frequencies from overloading the input. The high pass lter is placed 
in the circuit close to the microphone preamplier.
High pass lters are often frequency selectable, ranging from 20 Hz to 
200 Hz. HPF also have a slope, generally from 3 dB/octave to 18 dB/
octave. Greater/steeper slopes offer more attenuation of frequencies 
just below the set lter frequency.
Input
The physical connection and associated signal type from external 
sources connected to a device. Inputs can include microphone inputs 
on XLR connectors or USB audio inputs from a computer. Depending 
on the architecture of the mixing console its inputs may be hardwired 
to channels or channels can be selected from different inputs. 
Input limiter
A limiter circuit reduces the peak signal levels of audio, generally to 
prevent signal overload. Analog inputs have a maximum input signal 
level that can be reached before overload/distortion is introduced. 
Setting the input gain correctly so that input signals do not reach this 
maximum level prevents most overload conditions. In the presence of 
very high, unexpected signals an input limiter changes the gain of the 
incoming signal and prevents it from overloading. Input limiters are 
sometimes compressor-type circuits with a ratio of innity:1, meaning 
that any increase to the input signal into the limiter at the limiter 
threshold does not increase the output signal of the limiter. 
Several parameters may be available in a limiter, including knee, ratio, 
release, and threshold.
Isolated track
A recorded track of an individual microphone or sound source. “Iso” 
recordings allow for post-record mixing of individual sound elements.
iXML
An extensible data schema for audio and related metadata stored 
in broadcast WAV les. Manufacturer-specic data generated during 
recording is stored in iXML.
Line level
An analog audio signal used to interconnect audio equipment. Line 
level may be balanced or unbalanced, referenced to +4 dBu or -10 
dBV, professional or consumer respectively.
Low cut lter
See high pass lter.
Microphone level
The audio signal generated by a microphone. Mic level signals are 
very low level, requiring a microphone preamplier to bring them to 
usable, line levels. Interconnects with microphone level signals can be 
subject to noise and interference.
Mid-side linking (inputs)
When mid-side (MS) stereo inputs are used and the inputs are set to 
MS linking and MS decoder is activated for those inputs. This yields 
a stereo signal with one fader controlling overall input level and the 
other fader controlling the “width”, or amount of the side signal 
added. With an MS matrix at the input, the signal is sent to an output 
bus as left/right stereo. Mixers with MS matrices often allow for 
discrete mid and side signal recording. In that case the MS decoder 
can be activated at the headphone selection to monitor left/right 
stereo.
Mix track
A recorded track that is a sum of multiple tracks. In production sound 
the mix track is often a single summed track of all production dialog 
elements. Mix tracks can also be sub-mixes of like microphones, such 
as a sub mix of just lavalier microphones or just boom microphones.
Monophonic WAV
A WAV le that is comprised of a single track of audio. When recording 
multi-track audio with monophonic WAV les each track is recorded 
to its own WAV le, with a le name indicating the track number. All 
associated monophonic les that are part of a multi-track recording 
will be identical lengths. 
Mute 
A mute control is a convenient on/off switch for a channel and an 
easy way to remove a channel from appearing in downstream buses. 
Mute an input or channel does not change levels or settings; when 
channels are muted and unmuted, their settings remain.
Notes (metadata)
A metadata eld that is saved along with audio data in a recorded 
sound le, useful for sound report generation. Some workstation 
software recognizes the notes eld and presents it when viewing the 
sound le.










