User Manual
Table Of Contents
- UAD Powered Plug-Ins
 - Introduction
 - UAD Installation
- Overview
 - QuickStart DVD
 - System Requirements
 - Supported Hosts
 - Latest Information & Software Updates
 - UAD Software Installation
 - Install Software First
 - UAD Hardware Installation
 - Authorization
 - Authorize Plug-Ins Procedure
 - Load Authorization File
 - Offline Authorization
 - Using Unlicensed Plug-Ins
 - Verifying Installation
 - Learn More
 - Software Removal
 
 - UAD System Overview
 - My.uaudio.com
 - Using Multiple UAD Cards
 - UAD Meter & Control Panel
- Overview
 - Launching the UAD Meter & Control Panel Application
 - Using the UAD Meter
 - UAD Meter Elements
 - UAD Control Panel
 - System Information Panel
 - Plug-Ins Panel
 - Configuration Panel
 - Help & Support Panel
 
 - Using UAD Powered Plug-Ins
 - Tempo Sync
 - UAD Delay Compensation
 - UAD-Xpander & UAD-Xtenda
 - LA-2A and 1176LN
 - LA-3A Compressor
 - Fairchild 670
 - Precision Multiband
 - Precision Limiter
 - Precision Buss Compressor
 - Neve 33609 Compressor
 - VCA VU
 - Neve 88RS Channel Strip
 - CS-1 Channel Strip
 - Precision Equalizer
 - Cambridge EQ
 - Pultec and Pultec-Pro
 - Neve 1073 Equalizer
 - Neve 1081 Equalizer
 - Helios Type 69 Equalizer
 - Roland CE-1
 - Roland Dimension D
 - Roland RE-201
 - RealVerb Pro
 - DreamVerb
 - Plate 140
 - Precision Maximizer
 - Precision De-Esser
 - Precision Enhancer kHz
 - SPL Transient Designer
 - Nigel
- Introducing Nigel
 - Preflex Plug-in
 - Preflex Modules
 - Gate/Comp Module
 - Amp Module
 - Amp Controls
 - Cabinet Module
 - Phasor Module
 - Mod Filter Module
 - TremModEcho plug-in
 - Trem/Fade Module
 - Mod Delay Module
 - Echo Module
 
 - Moog Multimode Filter
 - History
 - Index
 

UAD Powered Plug-Ins Manual - 309 - Chapter 36: SPL Transient Designer
• Shorten the sustain period of a snare or a reverb tail in a very musical way 
to obtain more transparency in the mix.
• When recording a live drum set, shorten the toms or overheads without 
physically damping them. Usual efforts to damp and mike are reduced re-
markably. Since muffling of any drum also changes the dynamic response, 
the Transient Designer opens up a whole new soundscape.
• Micing live drums is considerably faster and easier because you can correct 
the apparent “distance” of the microphone by simply varying the ATTACK 
and SUSTAIN values.
• The Transient Designer is a perfect alternative to noise gates in live drum 
micing. Adaptively reacting to the duration of the original signal, the sustain 
is shortened more musically than with fixed release times and a drumset is 
freed from any crosstalk quickly and effectively.
• Create unusual dynamic effects including new and interesting pan effects. 
For example, patch a mono loop through two channels of the Transient De-
signer and pan fully left and right in the mix. Process the left channel with 
increased ATTACK and reduced SUSTAIN while you adjust the right chan-
nel the opposite way and you get very special stereo loop sounds. You have 
to try this to appreciate what it sounds like, but expect to hear a lot of un-
usual stereo movement.
• Enjoy an amazingly simple integration of drum sounds into a mix. If the 
acoustic level of a snare is expanded to approximately +4 dB by increasing 
the attack value, the effective increase of peak levels in the overall mix is 
merely about 0.5 dB to 1 dB.
Drums: 
Ambience
If your drums happen to sound as if the room mics have been placed in a shoe 
closet, the Transient Designer can immediately turn that sound into the ambi-
ence of an empty warehouse. Just send the stereo room mics through the Tran-
sient Designer and crank the ATTACK control to emphasize the first wave.
Now slowly increase SUSTAIN values to bring up an “all-buttons-in-1176-
sound” room tone—but without pumping cymbals. For a solid and driving 
rhythm track just fine-tune the SUSTAIN control to make sure that the room mic 
envelope ends more or less exactly on the desired upbeat or downbeat.










