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Calibration 

 

The following sections provide a more detailed look at some of the aspects of recording 
studio setup and trouble-shooting. While it is not absolutely necessary to read the 
material we feel that a basic understanding of the principles of calibration, equipment 
interface, and grounding issues can go a long way to helping engineers 

before

 the going 

gets rough. If one encounters inconsistent levels or hum problems in the studio, the 
following hints may help in understanding the issues and resolving the problems. These 
issues apply to recording gear in general, not just the 2Bus LT. 

 

The Dangerous 2Bus LT comes to you fully calibrated and ready to hook up. In order to 
enjoy the full benefits of a 2Bus LT system, the D/As used with it should be aligned. This 
can be done with the aid of a Voltmeter (VU meter in a compressor or other piece of gear 
on hand) and the digital oscillator found as a plug-in in most DAW systems. While it is 
not necessary to align the system, better and more consistent mix results will be obtained 
if this is done. There are two analog operating levels that most digital recording systems 
have converged upon depending on whether the situation is for 

recording

 or 

mastering

The difference between the two worlds is whether the maximum electrical stress is 
imposed by 

amplitude

 limiting (recording) or 

slew-rate

 limiting (mastering). 

 

 
Professional recording systems in the US have historically used the VU meter for 

system alignment and level monitoring, so naturally, with many years of precedent, there 
are holdovers today from that system (derived from the telephone and broadcast 
industries). The standard of ‘0VU’ comes from the Bell Telephone engineers needing a 
convenient way to measure signal levels in phone lines and switching systems. 600 ohm 
balanced lines were the norm and 1 milliwatt of energy was a pertinent amount of juice 
moving through phone circuits. A ‘building out’ resistor was added to the VU meter to 
avoid loading the audio circuit down and the reference level cranked back up so the meter 
read ‘0VU’. The resulting standard level wound up at +4dBu, or roughly 1.23 volts AC 
RMS. This standard has been with us for more than 60 years now the world over and is 
the ‘reference level’ to which most professional audio systems are aligned. 
 

 
 

Alignment Chart 

 
 Volts AC 

VU 

dBu   

dBfs (recording) 

dBfs (mastering) 

 

 

  9.76 v 

Tilt

 

+22 

 

0 (full scale)   

Tilt

 

 

 

 

 

  6.16 v 

Tilt

 

+18 

 -4dBfs 

  0 

(full 

scale) 

   

  1.23 v 

VU 

+4dBu 

 -18dBfs  -14dBfs

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 

 

-5- 

Summary of Contents for 2Bus LT

Page 1: ...been made possible by careful design construction and top shelf component choices by recording industry veterans This manual will assist the user in the installation of the 2Bus LT and calibration of...

Page 2: ...evel signals Separation of high level and low level equipment can pre empt trouble caused by heat and EMI 4 Care should be taken to avoid liquid spills around equipment If a spill occurs please shut o...

Page 3: ...et the needs of today s recording engineers producers and artists Hook up The 2Bus LT is designed to mix the outputs of two eight channel D A converters to a stereo recorder 16x2 The 2Bus LT is easily...

Page 4: ...unce the result to a new pair of tracks but by using 4 pairs of outputs audio flexibility can be improved by assigning the drums to DAW outputs 1 and 2 the bass and vocal to 3 and 4 the guitars to 5 a...

Page 5: ...ems have converged upon depending on whether the situation is for recording or mastering The difference between the two worlds is whether the maximum electrical stress is imposed by amplitude limiting...

Page 6: ...maximum analog signal level of 18dBu The reason for this is because mastered signals tend to be compressed and bright There is a lot of rapid change slew rate in the signal that overloads processing...

Page 7: ...oard where the input wires connect These tactics rarely need to be performed but if they do please work on a well lighted table or workbench We always clean off enough space to have plenty of room so...

Page 8: ...jitter or clock troubles in digital interfaces can be traced to poor planning and implementation of the studio s grounding situation It is illuminating to realize that the engineers of yore in the re...

Page 9: ...afety grounds in a random fashion until the system quiets down a bit This in our view and the view of the safety standards organizations is an unacceptable method of taming ground buzzes The simpler w...

Page 10: ...ow 16 7 shield 4 6 high 17 6 low 5 6 shield 18 5 high 6 5 low 19 5 shield 7 4 high 20 4 low 8 4 shield 21 3 high 9 3 low 22 3 shield 10 2 high 23 2 low 11 2 shield 24 1 high 12 1 low 25 1 shield 13 no...

Page 11: ...er consumption 25 watts Warranty Free 2 year extended warranty with online registration Standard warranty 90 days parts and labor subject to inspection Does not include damage incurred through abusive...

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