Bright Treble; Warm Bass; Classic Bass; Deep Bass - Midas XL8 Operator's Manual

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XL8 EQ modes

Bright treble

The bright treble response provides a slightly steeper gradient than the classic and it is
uniquely shaped to provide minimum harmonic disruption to the EQ'd material. As for
the classic EQ, this provides better differentiation and minimal phase shift, but now
there is no undershoot error corrupting the mids. This is best used on single source
material and especially good for acoustic performances.

Warm bass

The warm bass response provides a very gentle gradient between EQ'd and non-EQ'd
frequency areas. This produces the absolute minimum of phase shift, but does not
provide much differentiation, thus frequencies outside the area of interest are often
unintentionally EQ'd. This is best used to provide gentle shaping of pre mixed material.

Classic bass

The classic bass response provides a much steeper gradient between EQ'd and
non-EQ'd frequency areas and is modelled on the XL4. This provides better
differentiation and minimal phase shift, but there is some undershoot error, that is,
when boosting the bass, the mids are slightly cut and vice versa. This is often desirable
on bass EQ and it is the best all round, general purpose EQ curvature.

Deep bass

The deep bass response provides a slightly steeper gradient than the classic and it is
uniquely shaped to provide minimum harmonic disruption to the EQ'd material. As for
the classic EQ, this provides better differentiation and minimal phase shift, but there is
no undershoot error. Powerful boost/cut can be used that still sounds very natural and
does not corrupt the mids. This is best used on single source material.
XL8 Control Centre
Operator Manual
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