Line 6 headphones powered monitors Manuale Utente

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Line 6 GearBox 3.1 – Basic Features Guide
 
 
There are also separate show/hide arrows for showing/hiding the Amp and Effects controls 
together individually, or you can click the top-most arrow button to show/hide the Amp and 
Effects in one motion. 
 
 
 
 
 
How to resize the GearBox program window 
The width of the GearBox window cannot be changed. However, when the Browser is expanded. 
The height of the main Gearbox windows can be increased to allow the Browser to take as much 
vertical space as you have available on your computer's display.  
 
On Windows® - When the main GearBox window is not maximized (and when the Browser is 
expanded), you can click and hold the top or bottom edge of the main GearBox window and 
drag to make it taller or shorter. You can also click the maximizing icon (at the top right edge of 
the program window's title bar) to maximize its vertical size. 
 
On Mac® – When the Browser is expanded, you can click on the bottom right corner of the 
main GearBox windows and drag to resize it vertically.  
 
The Show/Hide “arrow” buttons work in conjunction with the show/hide arrows for the Effects, 
Browser and Track sections display to allow you to show/hide portions of the GuitarPort 
controls and maximize the space available for the Browser to display information. 
 
 
 
 
 
Use the Tuner 
  Click the button at the top right of the GearBox interface to display the Tuners tuner. You 
can then play an open single string on your guitar (or bass guitar), and the display on the right 
side of the tuner will show you which note that string is currently tuned to. The large meter in the 
tuner shows you whether the string is sharp or flat relative to that note. When the needle is 
pointing anywhere on the left side of the meter, your string is flat and needs to be tuned up. When 
the needle is pointing anywhere on the right side of the meter, your string is sharp and needs to be 
tuned down. The Mute/Bypass switch lets you choose whether your guitar will be muted while 
tuning, or if you will hear it with amp/cab/effect processing bypassed.  
 
The Tuner’s Reference control tells the Tuner what to tune to. 440Hz is the standard reference 
value for A and is generally used for tuning reference. Unless you have a particular need to adjust 
the Tuner's reference, you probably want to stick with the standard 440Hz setting for this control. 
 
 
 
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