Re: UX8800 Single Mode
Ok, I don't have any EAW stuff but...what the heck is "Single Mode" for those of us who just like to learn stuff here?
thanks
Previously, UX8800s had 2 main operating modes - system processing mode, and greybox mode. In regular system processing mode, the UX8800 behaves pretty much like any 4X8 processor - full control over signal assignment, filters, etc.
Greybox mode enabled all the cool stuff invented by Dave Gunness, and packaged those relevant settings into "greyboxes" - a baseline set of processing containing speaker correction elements that could not be touched by the end user. You still had EQ and delay control, but it is partially locked down, hence the "grey" box.
The quirk of how this was implemented previously, is that a greyboxe had to be set on your input processing channels, and the routing was determined from there. If you had a 3-way box, your greybox for that speaker would be assigned to input A, and outputs 1, 2, and 3 would be taken by that greybox, and so on.
The downside came when you have boxes with fewer bands, or for when you are using the internal crossovers of those boxes; you could run out of inputs before you used all your outputs. In my particular case, my main speakers are running single-amped. Input A was used up for left, assigned to output 1. Input B was used up for right, assigned to output 2. My subs - even if I ran stereo mode and not aux/group fed - took up "Input" C, since that's where the greybox lives, even though it got its signal from the sum of input jack A and B. I was left with only one input channel, and 5 output channels. I basically had a 4 X 4 processor.
In single mode, greyboxes are now assigned on output channels, and it's easier to mix greybox and non-greybox operation. My new configuration is now: Input A is left main, Input B is right main. Greyboxes for mains are on outputs 1 and 2, and the subs greybox is on output 3, fed from inputs A and B. I now have 2 of my 4 inputs available, and furthermore I can assign more greyboxes for delay fills, etc. that use up my output channels while still maintaining the cool processing.