Line 6 headphones powered monitors Manuale Utente

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Line 6 GearBox 3.1 – Basic Features Guide
 
 
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Welcome to the wonderful world of GearBox Plug-in, where legendary studio-standard tone and classic 
vintage effects are all available to you within your favorite recording application, in a flexible native 
software plug-in format!  
 
A Quickie Plug-in Primer
 
There are many types of plug-ins in the world of software. Plug-ins are relatively small applications 
that can only run when loaded inside a compatible host application. Plug-ins operate within the host 
application to extend the capabilities of the host. In the world of music software, audio plug-ins find 
frequent use inside audio/MIDI host applications, commonly referred to as DAWs (Digital Audio 
Workstations). Audio plug-ins provide signal processing for your audio tracks or live audio input. 
 
A helpful analogy for plug-ins is to think of them as effects pedals. Effects pedals change the tone of 
your bass or guitar before the signal reaches your amplifier. As with pedals, rack effects units, or any 
other conventional piece of outboard gear, plug-ins provide graphical controls for whatever parameters 
they might expose. For example, a distortion plug-in will most likely have similar controls to a typical 
distortion pedal (such as drive, gain and tone). Visually, plug-ins often resemble the physical gear they 
emulate.  
 
When working with DAWs, using plug-ins provides numerous benefits over using outboard effects 
like pedals or rack processors. Here are a few of the primary benefits: 
 
•  Plug-ins are “non-destructive” to your audio track – this means that you can add or remove 
effects and tweak their settings as often as you like without actually affecting the original 
audio recording. Recording with outboard gear means that the signal going to tape will be 
“wet” (with effects and amp tone) and cannot be changed without recording another pass. 
•  Plug-ins sound the same way twice. Because you can store plug-in settings as presets, precise 
settings can be loaded reliably with tweaking. Every time you go back to work on a specific 
song, you can rest assured that your tones will  be identical to the last session. 
•  Plug-ins are automatable. Host applications provide easy ways to create and manipulate 
automation, giving you surgical precision of your tone without having to “ride the faders” of 
external gear during a record pass. 
•  Plug-ins don’t break, corrode, take up space on your floor or get stolen 
 
MIDI Remote Control and Plug-in automation 
 
Most audio plug-ins are automatable, meaning their parameters can be manipulated in real-time by 
some method. The two most prevalent methods are MIDI automation and plug-in automation. Both 
methods provide unique benefits.  
 
 
 
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