Author
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balanced stereo-panning in zeta+
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martyn
IsraTrance Junior Member
Started Topics :
40
Posts :
389
Posted : Apr 6, 2006 23:48
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hello!
how can i achieve a balanced alternating l/r panning in zeta+? i simply want the sound to pan from the left to the right and vice versa but there's always one problem:
when i route an lfo to the "filter 1 panning" in the mod matrix the level on the right side is always higher than the level on the left side. the panning is not balanced. i experimented with different ranges, curves and lfo offsets but i couldn't get a satisfactory result.
does anybody know how to do this properly?
thanx in advance,
martyn
  www.myspace.com/mentris |
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Colin OOOD
Moderator
Started Topics :
95
Posts :
5380
Posted : Apr 7, 2006 02:30
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Quote:
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On 2006-04-06 23:48, martyn wrote:
hello!
how can i achieve a balanced alternating l/r panning in zeta+? i simply want the sound to pan from the left to the right and vice versa but there's always one problem:
when i route an lfo to the "filter 1 panning" in the mod matrix the level on the right side is always higher than the level on the left side. the panning is not balanced. i experimented with different ranges, curves and lfo offsets but i couldn't get a satisfactory result.
does anybody know how to do this properly?
thanx in advance,
martyn
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If you're only modulating the pan position of filter 1, you need to make sure that you're not using the other filter, otherwise the result will be as you say above. If your sound uses both filters (even if one of them is wide open or fully shut), you'll have to modulate the pan position of both of them to get the whole sound to move.
Hope this helps.
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SPAWNmaster
Started Topics :
6
Posts :
15
Posted : Apr 7, 2006 05:10
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maybe this is a very newb answer and im sorry if it doesnt help but try linking the filters...good luck
  ~SPAWNmaster~
AIM:andrewgarcia86 |
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Elad
Tsabeat/Sattel Battle
Started Topics :
158
Posts :
5306
Posted : Apr 7, 2006 08:20
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martyn
IsraTrance Junior Member
Started Topics :
40
Posts :
389
Posted : Apr 7, 2006 11:36
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thank you very much for your answers!
now i found out that i get the most balanced panning-result when i use the "B-LIN-" curve. it didn't have anything to do with the filter-settings, i had the same problem when i didn't use the filter-panning but the main panning and had the filter-settings all neutral. but now it seems to work. it's interesting to see what the different curves do to the panning, some strange results occur.
have a nice day,
martyn
  www.myspace.com/mentris |
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texmex
Started Topics :
5
Posts :
189
Posted : Apr 11, 2006 14:21
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B-LIN- stands for bipolar linear negative... so that the curve is balanced around zero and linear in nature. Negative means that it's reversed (if I recall correctly). If you used unipolar, it would change between 0..+x (or 0...-x in negative) instead of -x...+x |
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martyn
IsraTrance Junior Member
Started Topics :
40
Posts :
389
Posted : Apr 11, 2006 14:24
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