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help with q factor?
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<blockquote data-quote="thch" data-source="post: 5786336" data-attributes="member: 562032"><p>It refers to the range of tones (bandwidth) the filter affects.</p><p></p><p>The idea is that you might want to do something broad, like "increase bass in general", in which case you'd use the 2-w or 1-w setting.</p><p></p><p>But there are times when you want to get specific -- eg, if there is just one note that plays way too loud and doesn't blend in at all, you might use the 1-n or 2-n setting to affect just that note, or notes that sound very similar.</p><p></p><p>likely the w stands for "wide bandwidth" and n for "narrow bandwidth". You'd have to look at the manual or maybe display to see the exact order. I'd guess 2w-1w-1n-2n, but can't be sure.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="thch, post: 5786336, member: 562032"] It refers to the range of tones (bandwidth) the filter affects. The idea is that you might want to do something broad, like "increase bass in general", in which case you'd use the 2-w or 1-w setting. But there are times when you want to get specific -- eg, if there is just one note that plays way too loud and doesn't blend in at all, you might use the 1-n or 2-n setting to affect just that note, or notes that sound very similar. likely the w stands for "wide bandwidth" and n for "narrow bandwidth". You'd have to look at the manual or maybe display to see the exact order. I'd guess 2w-1w-1n-2n, but can't be sure. [/QUOTE]
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help with q factor?
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