Dynacord 2200-3 User Manual

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recording. This, for example, provides the possibility to 
enhance solo vocals or a solo instrument at specific 
passages so that they stand clearly in front of the mix. For 
that, you need to assign respective input channels to the 
AUX bus using the AUX controls. Post-fader mode is 
useful.
A very recommendable option is to use the two AUX ways 
in order to record the signals of a stereo microphone po-
sitioned in front of the stage. Recordings, which are fed 
only from the PA mixer, are often disappointing, because 
audience reactions are completely missing and the sound 
does not reflect the live performance. That is because of 
the fact that particularly in small venues the acoustic out-
put or electrical signal of many musical instruments, 
which by nature already have sufficient clout (such as 
drums, electric guitar, etc.) gets reproduced only to a 
slight degree or not at all via the public address system. 
Conversely, sound recordings that only employ a room 
microphone, very often sound indirect and especially the 
vocals suffer from a lack of clearness and intelligibility. 
The Live mode of the PowerMate offers the possibility to 
simultaneously record both signal sources (mixer output 
and room microphone) separate from each other. During 
post-production of the recording you can comfortably 
match all tracks in proportion to each other. 
HINT: Make sure that during recording the signals of 
the room microphones are not included in the 
PA mix to prevent feedback. Therefore, the fad-
ers of the „room channels“ have to be pulled all 
the way down. The AUX ways, nevertheless, 
have to be operated in pre-fader mode in order 
to feed the signal to the DIGITAL AUDIO INTER-
FACE.
S
TUDIO
: 4-
TRACK
 
RECORDING
 
In studio mode, the four buses MON 1, MON 2,  AUX 1 
and AUX 2 are available to the PC/Mac in sequence on the 
USB channels 1, 2, 3, and 4.
For recording you will need any multi-track recording 
software, e.g. the included Cubase LE software. Notes on 
how to assign recording channels 1-4 to corresponding 
tracks can be found in the documentation that has been 
supplied with your software. 
The option of multi-assignment does not limit you to the 
use of only four tracks within the software application. 
Over-dubbing allows the gradual creation of almost any 
number of tracks. Establishing the mix-down of the 
recorded tracks as well as assigning the desired effects 
processing is usually done on the PC. A very convenient 
option to accomplish this is to assign the stereo master 
of your software application to the playback channels 
USB 1 and USB2 of the PowerMate.
In order to gain the full flexibility of a 4-track recording 
mixer, the ways should not be used for other purposes, e. 
g. for monitoring. The studio mode is mainly meant for 
capturing song ideas and the production of demo 
recordings in a home studio or rehearsal room. For this 
application, AUX 1 and AUX 2 should be operated in pre-
mode and the graphic EQ should not be assigned to the 
monitor ways. During recording, use the AUX/MON cont-
rols to assign the musical instruments that are to be 
recorded at the same time to the four tracks. You can also 
already combine some instruments in a pre-mix. For 
example, it might be useful to combine the individual 
drums of a drum-set in a single drums track. Since AUX 
and MON tap the pre-fader signal, you can use the faders 
on the mixer to create the monitor-mix for the musicians.
Using headphones for the monitoring is of course always 
recommended, since the acoustic signal of loudspeaker 
systems also affects the recording microphones. Use the 
USB playback channels in order to feed the signal of al-
ready recorded tracks (overdubbing) or a click-track to 
the musicians' monitor-mix during the recording. 
Since you use your PowerMate as recording center, true 
zero-latency monitoring is guaranteed, i. e. during the 
recording of vocals or musical instruments, you create 
your monitor-mix (headphones) directly in the mixer, wit-
hout routing the audio signal first to the PC and then back 
again to the mixer. Inherent to its functional principle, 
such an approach is always associated with a certain run-
time delay (latency), which, if it is too high, basically 
renders the rhythmic performance of a musician impos-
sible or, vice versa, makes very high demands on the sys-
tem, if the latency has to be imperceptibly low. The 
complete description of the recording procedure goes 
beyond the scope of an owner's manual, particularly 
since the optimal approach depends to a great extent on 
the necessities of the band members, the music style and 
the preferences of the musicians. 
At this point, we refer to the extensive literature available 
on this topic, and would like to encourage you to explore 
the comprehensive possibilities and features offered by 
the PowerMate for the recording process for yourself. 
Illustration 4-9: USB Record Routing dialog (Studio)
USB Record Routing
AUX 1
DIGITAL AUDIO INTERFACE
Live
Studio
MON 1
AUX 2
MON 2
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