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12 <h1>Equalizer
5 Band
</h1>
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14 <h2>Functionality
</h2>
16 Equalizers are possibly the most used signal processors in a studio environment. With an equalizer you can
<strong>alter the frequency spectrum of an instrument
</strong> with different types of filters. Equalizers are used to
<strong>increase or decrease the volume of different frequency ranges
</strong>. You may add some presence to your track, cut unneccessary sub frequencies, make
"room" for mixing a signal with others without producing indifferent mud, brighten dull recordings or
"fix" an unsatisfying but not reproducable recording - Equalizers are the
<strong>swiss army knife
</strong> in audio production.
18 <strong>The
5 band equalizer
</strong> is the perfect channel strip solution. A high- and lowshelf and three parametric peak filters give you enough flexibility for standard manipulations.
22 <strong>The Calf Equalizer
5 Band consists of two different types of filters:
</strong>
25 <li><strong>Shelving filters
</strong>: This type of filter got it's name from it's characteristics - it looks like the shelv of a cow. A highshelf filter increases or decreases all frequencies above the center frequency equally, the lowpass does vice versa.
</li>
26 <li><strong>Peak filters
</strong>: Peak or bell filters increase or decrease the frequencies around the center frequency. A high quality setting of this filter results in a needle while lower quality settings produce a wider bell.
</li>
29 Calf Equalizers are designed to give you the most control over your frequency response. The peak filters can add or subtract
<strong>up to
36dB at a really high Q
</strong> to your signal. This can result in a self resonating tone in comparison to a nearly complete removal of a single narrow band.
33 <strong>Please refer to the
<a href=
"Equalizer 12 Band.html" title=
"Equalizer 12 Band">Equalizer
12 Band manual
</a> for more information on equalization.
</strong>
37 <li><strong>Input L/R:
</strong> The level after the input knob. The LED's flash on levels above
0dB
</li>
38 <li><strong>Bypass:
</strong> Don't process anything, just bypass the signal
</li>
39 <li><strong>Input knob:
</strong> Control the input level before the signal is processed
</li>
40 <li><strong>Output L/R:
</strong> The level after processing and after the output knob. The LED's flash on levels above
0dB
</li>
41 <li><strong>Output knob:
</strong> Control the output of the plugin - clipping could destroy your signal
</li>
42 <li><strong>Low/Highshelf Frequency:
</strong> The center frequency of the filter
</li>
43 <li><strong>Low/Highshelf Level:
</strong> The amount in dB's the center frequency is increased or decreased
</li>
44 <li><strong>Low/Highshelf Active:
</strong> Power on this filter and select an operating mode. Inactive Filters don't use any CPU
</li>
45 <li><strong>Peak Frequency:
</strong> The center frequency of the filter
</li>
46 <li><strong>Peak Level:
</strong> The amount in dB's the center frequency is increased or decreased
</li>
47 <li><strong>Peak Q:
</strong> The quality of the filter. Higher values create needles, lower ones bell filters
</li>
48 <li><strong>Peak Active:
</strong> Power on this filter and select an operating mode. Inactive Filters don't use any CPU
</li>
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