Behringer Digital Mixer X32 用户手册

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页码 70
31
X32 DIGITAL MIXER Preliminary User Manual
To load a preset from the UTILITIES screen, adjust the first encoder to select 
which aspects of the selected channel you wish to recall, then press the 2nd 
encoder. A confirmation screen will pop-up, asking you to confirm you wish 
to load a preset to the currently selected channel. Use the page left/right 
buttons to confirm or cancel. 
Press the LIBRARY button to go straight to the “libraries” screen, where you 
can scroll through a list of stored preset libraries. 
Use the 5th and 6th encoders to import/export presets to/from an attached 
USB drive.
5.13  How do I set up a Matrix for a delay 
column/tower or a remote zone mix?
The X32 console offers 6 separate “Matrix” outputs that allow an extra level 
of functionality when routing any of the 16 mix buses out of the console. 
These Matrix outputs are particularly useful when working with separate “zones” 
of speakers, such as a delayed group of speakers in an alternate location.
1.  Press the SELECT button for a mix bus you wish to assign to a matrix output.
2.  Page right to the SENDS page, where you can adjust the 6 encoders to 
send the selected mix bus to the 6 matrix outputs, at the desired levels. 
Alternatively use the controls in the BUS SENDS section.
3.  When sending a group of mix outputs into a matrix send, you may wish 
to adjust where in the signal path the insert point for a mix output occurs, 
and also re-configure the order that the mix output’s EQ and compressor 
occurs. To adjust these setting, press the SELECT button for the desired mix 
output, and on the HOME screen that appears, use the 3rd and 4th encoder 
to adjust these settings. 
4.  Press the MATRIX button on the console, then press the SELECT button on 
the first output fader. The main screen will display settings for the matrix 
1 output allowing you to do all your EQ and dynamics settings for this bus. 
In general, time alignment is very important in larger venues, because when 
groups of speakers are placed at varying distances to the audience, the sound 
from them arrives at the listener’s ears at different times. By applying a digital 
delay to the speakers that are CLOSER to the listeners, it has the result of delaying 
the sound to align it, in time, with the sound from further speakers whose 
signal take longer to reach the listener. By performing this “time-alignment”, 
the live sound mix from the different speakers are presented as a more clear and 
cohesive audio signal, without the comb-filtering or flanging sound you might 
otherwise experience.
5.  To attach an output to the matrix you have set up, press the ROUTING 
button, then page right to the ANALOG OUT page, then use the 1st and 4th 
encoders to assign the matrix output to your rear-panel analog output of 
choice. Adjust the amount of delay if necessary with the 6th encoder for each 
output individually. 
6.  In some situations, you may wish to create a matrix mix that is actually a 
mix of some output buses and the main LR output. To do so, simply press 
the SELECT button above the master fader, then press the HOME button, 
then page right to the SENDS page. On the SENDS page you can tap the signal 
from the main LR bus and send it to the 6 matrix outputs, the same way you 
have with any of the 16 mix outputs. 
5.14  Using the X32 in recording and 
production studio environments
While the X32 is primarily targeted at a live sound environment, it also can work 
as an extremely full-featured and powerful studio console as well.
The console contains extremely clean and detailed microphone preamps, 
allowing you to capture up to 32 separate microphones for recording even a 
very large ensemble.
High-end analog to digital converters for each channel preserve the audio 
quality as it is recorded to assorted DAW software.
With the X32’s built-in XUF card, individual channels of audio can be sent, 
in the digital domain, to a studio DAW computer, using USB 2.0 and/or 
Firewire. With this card, the X32 becomes the “world’s biggest computer 
audio interface” allowing up to 32 channels of microphones to be sent into 
the DAW software, while at the same time allowing up to 32 individual 
channels of DAW tracks to return back to the console for mixing “out of 
the box”. 
With the X32’s full recall of all preamp and monitor settings, the console 
makes a great solution for the modern home and project studio, where 
multiple projects are worked on in “stages” and previous settings need to 
be quickly and easily recalled. For example, if a band returns the following 
week to pick up where they left off, a single “load project” command can 
return the console to exactly where it left off, in terms of mic gain settings 
for the different instruments, as well as various different monitor mixes for 
the different performers.
With its onboard MIDI ports, the X32 console can work as a large-format 
control surface for many popular DAW platforms. The X32’s motorized faders 
can control the onscreen DAW faders, while each channel’s mute and solo 
buttons can control their onscreen counterparts. This makes it possible 
to quickly work with the finer nuances of a DAW mix, much better than 
adjusting channel levels one at a time with the mouse. 
Since the X32 console works with the affordable S16 digital stagebox, 
the combined system makes a great solution for routing audio signals 
between a separate studio and control room. The S16 and various Ultranet 
personal monitor mixers can be set up in the studio, while the console 
itself is set up in the  control room. A single Cat-5 Ethernet cable is all that 
is needed to connect the 16-32 channels of audio from 1-2 S16 boxes and 
all of the Ultranet mixers, a much better alternative than a thick, noisy, 
and expensive analog snake. In more modern homes and apartments 
that have Cat-5 cabling running through the walls as part of a pre-built 
“structured wiring” package, the S16/Ultranet mixers and X32 console can 
even be set up in different rooms, with no need to run a long cable or leave 
any doors partially open!