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Notice

This manual provides general information, preparation for use, installation and oper-

ating instructions for the Black Lion Audio PBR-Series Patchbays.

The information contained in this manual is subject to change without notice. Black 

Lion Audio makes no warranties of any kind with regard to this manual, including, but 

not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular 

purpose. Black Lion Audio shall not be liable for errors contained herein or direct, indi-

rect, special, incidental, or consequential damages in connection with the furnishing, 

performance, or use of this material. 

©2022 Black Lion Audio. The Black Lion Audio ‘Lion Face’ logo, BLA, are trademarks 

or registered trademarks of Black Lion Audio. 
This manual and any associated intellectual property are subject to 

copyright protection. No part of this document may be reproduced in 

any form without explicit written consent from Black Lion Audio.

Owner’s Manual

SIGNAL FLOW IN YOUR TRS PATCHBAY

The flow of signal through a patchbay module is affected by both 

physical connections and mode setting (Normaled or Half-

Normaled.)  The most common configuration for a patchbay is for 

signals to come in to the patchbay from the top rear connections, 

and out of the patchbay from the bottom rear connections. 

Conversely, on the front of the patchbay, the top row connections 

are outputs and the bottom row connections are inputs. 

With jacks connected to the top rear and bottom rear of 

a single patchbay module, signals coming into a top rear 

connection are passed directly through to the output on the 

bottom rear, as shown here. This connection  style should 

be used for your hardware’s “default” configuration - the way 

you want your signals to flow on a day-to-day basis.

When no jacks are connected to the top connections of a module, a  

signal from the front bottom input is passed through to the rear bottom 

output.

When all four jacks are connected to a patchbay module, a signal 

connected to a rear top input of the patchbay is passed to the front top 

output, while signal from the the front bottom input is passed to the 

rear bottom output.

NORMALED OPERATION

When a module is set to Normaled and connections are made to the 

top rear and top front jacks, the signal is passed through from the 

top rear to the top front - 

breaking the connection  shown in figure 1.

 

A Normaled configuration allows you to run several devices in series by  

using patch cables on the front of the patchbay to interconnect several 

of your devices. For example, you could run a signal from a preamp, to a 

compressor, and finally to a reverb. A cable inserted into the bottom 

rear will have its connection connection broken when a cable is 

inserted into the top front.

HALF-NORMALED OPERATION

When  a  module  is  set  to  Half-Normaled  and  connections  are  made 

to the rear top, rear bottom, and front top jacks, the signal is passed 

through from the top rear to the top front - 

without

 

breaking the con-

nection  shown in figure 1.

 

This allows you to use the patchbay as a mult (splitter), sending the signal 

coming into the patchbay to two different destinations; very useful for 

parallel processing of your signal and monitoring applications. Inserting 

a cable in to the front bottom jack of a half-normaled module will break 

the connection between the rear jacks.

TRS PATCHBAY TIPS

We advise against connecting a single device, interface, or outboard 

processor to a single module’s vertically-connected set of patch points. 

In other words, don’t connect both the Input and Output of a delay unit on 

module 1 of your patchbay - that would could create a feedback loop. Use 

separate modules for a single devices inputs and outputs. 

Furthermore, doing so severely limits the convenience of a patchbay. It 

also forces you to use more patch cables, and increases the minimum 

length of the signal chain. In reality it is more convenient to wire the 

normalling scheme around the way that your particular studio is wired 

and will most commonly be used, and to modify those connections by 

breaking patches from the front of the patchbay when something other 

than the “standard” configuration for your studio is desired.

Based on our experience, basing patchbay wiring on thru connections 

(without internal normaling) is quick and easy. That said, we’ve found 

that  using  a  normalled  or  half-normalled  configuration  based  on  the 

most commonly-used processing chains in your studio saves a lot of 

time in the long run. 

We advise against running phantom power through a TRS patchbay, as 

this makes it possible to send phantom power to a device not designed 

to handle it; expensive damage could result! 

Fig. 2

Fig. 1

Fig. 3

Fig. 4

Fig. 5

PBR-Series 

Patchbays

PBR TRS

PBR TRS-BT

PBR XLR

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