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woods
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Sep 20, 2002
Posts: 130
Location: Calais, Maine
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Posted:
Wed May 14, 2003 3:37 pm |
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Updated with added comments by Bob Katz about dithering.
I would like to ask a question about the interaction of your Masterlink with the Manley Vari Mu and the massive Passive (or any other brands)- in the mixdown phase and then (home) mastering phase.
When you are doing a mix down:
1. Do you mix down to the Masterlink? If so, does that mean that the program material ends up on the Masterlink's Hard Drive at this point?
2. Also, during that mix down do you go through the Vari Mu and/or the massive Passi ve?
Notwithstanding the above answers:
3. What would the mastering chain be under the above circumstances? Do you begin with the already mixed down material on the Masterlink hard drive and then ad mastering comp/eq and record the mastered material onto the Masterlink CD burner?
Or do you burn a CD of the unmastered mixed down material that is on the Masterlink hard drive from the mixdown phase?
Then, take that CD and then master from it? If so, how is this done, ie. Do you use a separate CD player to play that CD and then run through the Manley gear and back into the Masterlink, or something else?
Alternatively, can already mixed down material on the Masterlink hard drive - be cabled out of the Masterlink and into the comp/eq - then cabled back into the Masterlink for burning to CD.
Ciao,
Woods |
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woods
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Sep 20, 2002
Posts: 130
Location: Calais, Maine
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Posted:
Sun May 18, 2003 5:44 pm |
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I'll frame the question this way.
I had gotten some other comments back as well and you all have eased my concern. I was unsure about the mastering moniker tagged to the Vari Mu.
Also, i am wondering - you don't by any chance use it in conjunction with a Masterlink? That is what I will be mixing and mastering to. But I wonder a few things. For instance - if you mix to the Masterlink's hard drive - can you then come out of the masterlink and into the Vari Mu - and then come back into the Masterlink for burning the master onto the Masterlink's CD burner?
If that routing is not possible then how do you do mastering with the Masterlink - using dedicated mastering compressor and EQ?
Thanks again,
Woods |
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lowdbrent
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Mar 8, 2003
Posts: 155
Location: whocares
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Posted:
Wed May 21, 2003 2:13 pm |
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| Quote: | Originally posted by Woods Palmer:
I'll frame the question this way.
I had gotten some other comments back as well and you all have eased my concern. I was unsure about the mastering moniker tagged to the Vari Mu.
Also, i am wondering - you don't by any chance use it in conjunction with a Masterlink? That is what I will be mixing and mastering to. But I wonder a few things. For instance - if you mix to the Masterlink's hard drive - can you then come out of the masterlink and into the Vari Mu - and then come back into the Masterlink for burning the master onto the Masterlink's CD burner?
If that routing is not possible then how do you do mastering with the Masterlink - using dedicated mastering compressor and EQ?
Thanks again,
Woods | The hard drive is the only device in Masterlink that you can record to. It is not configured to record to the CD-R drive.
What happens is that you can record on the hard drive (s), edit, apply DSP, copy, etc., then you transfer to the CD-R.
I own a Masterlink. I have talked to many people about the Masterlink, and they confirm my experiences. There are too many issues for it to be used as a serious mastering machine. It collapses the stereo image, there are pops and clicks in the audio path when buttons are pushed. The sound is not at all high-end to my ear.
I don't master to mine anymore. I use mine for forensic audio work, and maybe a live, low-end 2-track recording. |
_________________ When you die, you can't take it with you. So, can I have it? |
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woods
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Sep 20, 2002
Posts: 130
Location: Calais, Maine
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Posted:
Wed May 21, 2003 4:04 pm |
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Really!
What do you master to now, if you do mastering now?
Have you ever determined at what stage in the Masterlink that the stereo image is collapsed?
The hard drive or the CDR? (I guess that would be difficult to determine considering that the only way to get anything out of the Masterlink is to burn a CD.) Maybe I should reconsider my purchase plans.
What would be a good machine to mix and master to? Or would you need two machines - One to mix to. Then playback from the one you mixed to and go through Vari Mu and EQ and then record to a second machine?
woods
Is there any other machine that allows the song shuffling and the fade functions that the Masterlink offers? (Besides a computer-based DAW system) |
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lowdbrent
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Mar 8, 2003
Posts: 155
Location: whocares
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Posted:
Wed May 21, 2003 5:17 pm |
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| Quote: | Originally posted by Woods Palmer:
Really!
What do you master to now, if you do mastering now?
Have you ever determined at what stage in the Masterlink that the stereo image is collapsed?
The hard drive or the CDR? (I guess that would be difficult to determine considering that the only way to get anything out of the Masterlink is to burn a CD.) Maybe I should reconsider my purchase plans.
What would be a good machine to mix and master to? Or would you need two machines - One to mix to. Then playback from the one you mixed to and go through Vari Mu and EQ and then record to a second machine?
woods
Is there any other machine that allows the song shuffling and the fade functions that the Masterlink offers? (Besides a computer-based DAW system) | Ampex 1/2" or 1/4" for analog. I bounce to disc from Pro Tools HD, and use various software to burn on my Mac's Superdrive (Pioneer)- mostly for low-ball stuff. I have a friend who has the big Sony toys and HDCD if I need them.
The collapse is on the digital input. I hate the convertor's sound, so that did it for me. Alsesis knows about the problem. |
_________________ When you die, you can't take it with you. So, can I have it? |
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woods
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Sep 20, 2002
Posts: 130
Location: Calais, Maine
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Posted:
Wed May 21, 2003 5:56 pm |
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Ohhh OK.....
So if a guy had the Cranesong HEDD on the way into the Masterlink he could maintain the stereo separation?
And also, as I will not be using a computer, DAW, or Protools, etc. -- would the following scenario cut it? And have you ever heard of this signal chain in any hi end pro mastering suites - or any other for that matter?
1. Mix down to Masterlink (do song shuffle and fades, etc.
2. Burn CD in Masterlink.
3. Play CD in Masterlink.
4. Come out of Masterlink
5. Into Vari Mu and Massive Passive
6. Record mastered material onto separate CD burner. |
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lowdbrent
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Mar 8, 2003
Posts: 155
Location: whocares
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Posted:
Wed May 21, 2003 9:22 pm |
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1. You can play off of the hard drive, so you do not need to burn a disc. Plus doing it this way eliminates another stage of error correction and conversion.
2. The DSP in Masterlink blows chud. Most of the people that I know, that are power users, do not do anything with the internal DSP.
3. Shuffling and stuff is ok. You better make safety copies on CD-R, incase you need to restore a playlist. |
_________________ When you die, you can't take it with you. So, can I have it? |
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woods
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Sep 20, 2002
Posts: 130
Location: Calais, Maine
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Posted:
Wed May 21, 2003 9:41 pm |
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When you say "you can play off the Masterlink's hard drive what do you mean?
Does that mean you can mix to the Masterlink's hard drive and then record to an external CD recorder?
Also, what about your comments about the Masterlink's converters being the culprit of the collapsing of the stereo image?
YOu said that it was because of the digital converters on the way in to the Masterlink.
What if you went throught the HEDD on your way into the Masterlink -- would that eliminate the problem with the collapsing of the stereo image? |
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lowdbrent
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Mar 8, 2003
Posts: 155
Location: whocares
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Posted:
Wed May 21, 2003 10:52 pm |
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When you record to the masterlink, it must go to the hard drive. You can play "playlists" from the drive, like you would play "tracks" from the CD-R drive.
Yes, you could output digital and analog signal to another machine, or you could burn a CD24 format disc, and open it up in a Mac.
The collapse happens using the digital inputs. So, you would be screwed as well. I know that the convertors inside are crap, that is why I never used the analog inputs. I bought the machine, not knowing that I could not use an outboard A/D convertor, without it jacking with the signal. It should be the analog inputs that get jacked with, since they are using such low grade convertors.
You just need to experience one. Evidently they are tanking. They are below $750 street price. |
_________________ When you die, you can't take it with you. So, can I have it? |
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woods
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Sep 20, 2002
Posts: 130
Location: Calais, Maine
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Posted:
Thu May 22, 2003 4:56 am |
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Could you expand a little on your comments about not able to use outboard A/D convertor, without it jacking with the signal. (What do you mean by JACKING?)
So does that mean that using a Cranesong HEDD on the way in would not help the collapsing image?
Woods
The collapse happens using the digital inputs. So, you would be screwed as well. I know that the convertors inside are crap, that is why I never used the analog inputs. I bought the machine, not knowing that I could not use an outboard A/D convertor, without it jacking with the signal. It should be the analog inputs that get jacked with, since they are using such low grade convertors. |
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lowdbrent
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Mar 8, 2003
Posts: 155
Location: whocares
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Posted:
Thu May 22, 2003 6:46 am |
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I think that you are confused about "digital" and "analog" input terminology.
An analog input on a digital device means that you can plug an analog source into it, and it will be converted to digital. The Masterlink's convertors are not master quality. So this for me was not an option.
A Digital input on a digital device means that you can only plug in a source that is digital already. In this case you can plug in an AES/EBU or S/PDIF cable. It is coming in digitally that should be the purest way to go, but, to my ear (and other's) the stereo field collapses. It sounds as if there is a phase problem. I can't nail down the specifics. All that I know is that I don't use it any more.
Any input source, digital or analog, will be tainted if you stick it in this thing.
If you have the money to own or rent the Crane Song and the Manley, then you have the money to rent a great master recorder. The Masterlink would be the weak link in your chain. |
_________________ When you die, you can't take it with you. So, can I have it? |
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lowdbrent
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Mar 8, 2003
Posts: 155
Location: whocares
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Posted:
Thu May 22, 2003 6:53 am |
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I can take a CD, like Dream Theater's Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence, play it on a Tascam CD-R, and then play it on the Masterlink. The Masterlink will show overs, the Tascam will not.
With both machines connected via AES/EBU to my Pro Tools 192 I/O's, the Masterlink will send overs/clips to Pro Tools, the Tascam will not. Quite odd. There is no calibration for the digital level in the Utilities menu, nor should there be one. This should not happen. |
_________________ When you die, you can't take it with you. So, can I have it? |
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cjogo
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Mar 23, 2001
Posts: 38
Location: carmel valley,ca
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Posted:
Fri May 23, 2003 10:00 am |
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We go directly from the VS 2480 to Manley DVC and then to the Masterlink.....the VS allows us a complete "master system" on-board but much prefer the Manley. We actually compress each individual channel within the Roland. At the Manley we generally apply a little roll-off of 40 hz and add the limiter slightly into the process. We watch the meters on the Masterlink and correct the overall gain/limiter with the Manley. But I would not introduce another CDR. Master directly to the Alesis. After we surgically add the above process,,,we then use the normalizer in the DSp of the Masterlink to bring the levels to their quality max. After burning a CD and listening in several enviroments (car, boom box,etc ) We determine whether to subtract or add EQ to the mix, by simply entering the recorded tune on the harddrive and accessing the DSP------amazingly simple and great quality..... And very affordable (quick)for our clients
CJoGo
[URL= crystal]http://fp2k.redshift.com/cjogo/crystalrecording.htm]crystal studios[/URL] |
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omegaarts
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: May 11, 2003
Posts: 204
Location: Macon, GA
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Posted:
Sat May 24, 2003 7:38 am |
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well I've had just the opposite experience with my Masterlink.
If I burn a digital mix to my HHB CD recorder and burn the same mix to the Masterlink and play them back digitally on my Sony console the Masterlink mix is much more open and wider than the mix I burned on my CD recorder. This is especially true if I burn a CD 24. I never use the DSP in Masterlink unless I'm just experimenting.
Have your thoughts been tested in anyway or is this just a perception? Lowbrent who are the many people you have confirmed this with? I'm not trying to start a confrotation just don't have the same experience here.
In fact when I just play a CD through my console (DMX R-100) my CD player of choice is the Masterlink. When I take a project to mastering I take it in CD 24 format then they can either go all dig or analog. I've never used the analog inputs so I don't know about that, but what could happen technically that would cause a stereo image to collaspe if it is all digital?
Maybe I'm missing somthing here. |
_________________ Larry Howard |
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lowdbrent
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Mar 8, 2003
Posts: 155
Location: whocares
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Posted:
Sun May 25, 2003 10:57 pm |
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Grammy award winning engineers and studio owners in LA, Mastering engineers in Nashville, and a couple of former Alesis people themselves. |
_________________ When you die, you can't take it with you. So, can I have it? |
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