Specifications

Audio Plug-Ins Guide166
To adjust high-frequency cut or damp:
Drag the yellow dot right or left.
Reverb EQ Graph
You can use this 3-band equalizer to shape the
tonal spectrum of the reverb. The EQ is post-re-
verb and affects both the reverb tail and the
early reflections.
Frequency Sliders
Sets the frequency boundar-
ies between the low, mid, and high band ranges
of the EQ.
The low frequency slider (60.0 Hz–22.5 kHz)
sets the frequency boundary between low and
mid cut/boost points in the EQ.
The high-frequency slider (64.0 Hz–24.0 kHz)
sets the frequency boundary between the mid
and high cut/boost points in the EQ.
Band Breakpoints
Control cut and boost values
for the low, mid, and high frequencies of the EQ.
To cut a frequency band, drag a breakpoint
downward. To boost, drag upward. The adjust-
able range is from –24.0 dB to 12.0 dB.
HF Cut Breakpoint
Sets the frequency above
which a 6 dB/octave low pass filter attenuates
the processed signal. It removes both early re-
flections and reverb tails, affecting the overall
high-frequency content of the reverb. Use the
HF Cut control to roll off high frequencies and
create more natural-sounding reverberation.
The adjustable range is from 120.0 Hz to
24.0 kHz.
Reverb Color Graph
You can use the Reverb Color graph to shape the
tonal spectrum of the reverb by controlling the
decay times of the different frequency bands.
Low and high crossover points define the cut
and boost points of three frequency ranges.
For best results, set crossover points at least two
octaves higher than the frequency you want to
boost or cut. For example, to boost a signal at
100 Hz, set the crossover to 400 Hz.
Adjusting graph controls
Reverb EQ graph
HF Cut/HF Damp
Band Cut/Boost
Frequency/Cross-Frequency/Cross- Frequency/Cross-
High-Frequency
Band Out/Boost
Low Frequency
High-Frequency slider