Effects
Basic Overview
9-3
The
CHANFX
page
in
Effects
mode—or
the
FX
page
in
either
Setup
or
Song
mode—provides
per
‐
channel
control
over
effects
allocation.
The
channel
with
a
box
around
its
channel
number
is
the
current
channel
in
Program
mode,
or
the
specified
Aux
Effect
channel
in
Setup
and
Song
mode.
Each
channel
can
be
set
to
Y
to
allocate
effects
for
that
channel,
or
to
N
to
not
allocate
effects
for
that
channel.
Some
channels
set
to
Y
may
be
displayed
as
(Y)
.
This
means
that
effects
resources
are
not
available
for
that
channel,
and
that
channel’s
effects
are
not
loaded.
Setting
a
channel
to
N
does
not
disable
that
channel’s
effects
settings;
rather
it
only
specifies
that
no
effects
are
allocated
for
that
channel.
As
the
cursor
is
moved
from
left
to
right,
the
Insert
and
(if
its
the
current
channel
or
specified
Aux
Effects
channel)
Aux
Effects
for
that
channel
are
displayed
below
the
allocation
line
of
the
page.
The
number
of
DSP
units
required
to
load
effects
for
the
cursor
‐
highlighted
channel
is
shown
at
the
top
of
the
page.
A Note on Modes
Be
sure
to
read
the
section
on
using
effects
in
Program
mode,
The
Program
FX
(PROGFX)
Page
on page 6
‐
47.
The
configurations
in
Effect
mode
apply
in
every
mode
except
for
Setup
mode
and
Song
mode.
In
both
Setup
and
Song
mode,
the
configurations
for
each
mode’s
own
four
Effects
pages
prevail
over
the
configurations
in
Effects
mode.
Aux Override
In
Effects
mode,
Setup
mode,
and
Song
mode,
the
AUXFX1
and
AUXFX2
pages
provide
overrides
for
Aux
Chain
selection
and
other
Aux
Effects
parameters.
Normally,
the
Aux
Effects
Chains
are
specified
by
the
program
on
the
current
channel—or,
in
Setup
mode
and
Song
mode,
by
the
program
on
the
specified
Aux
Effects
channel.
The
Chain
specified
for
the
Aux
override
(as
well
as
the
send
levels
and
other
parameters)
is
applied
to
the
program
instead
of
the
program’s
Aux
Effect.
Also,
send
levels
and
other
parameters
normally
specified
within
individual
programs
can
be
set
to
fixed
values
on
the
Aux
Override
pages.
This
is
particularly
useful
in
Setup
mode
and
Song
mode,
which
are
multitimbral
modes.
If
you
wanted
to
apply
an
effect
to
all
zones
or
tracks
in
the
current
setup
or
song,
changing
each
program’s
effects
would
not
only
be
a
long
process
but
use
up
a
lot
of
DSP
units.
By
setting
the
Aux
override
Effect
to
your
desired
Chain,
you
can
apply
the
same
effect
to
up
to
16
zones
or
tracks
without
having
to
use
up
any
more
DSP
units.
Notice
that
in
Program
mode,
if
an
Aux
effect
is
overriden
in
Effect
mode,
the
top
line
of
the
PROGFX
(or
LYR_FX)
page
indicates
that
corresponding
Chain
does
not
use
up
any
DSP
units.
Since
the
Chain
is
not
applied,
the
PC3K
does
not
allocate
resources
for
it.
Summary of Contents for PC3K6
Page 24: ...1 6 Introduction Options...
Page 50: ...4 4 The Operating Modes Using the Modes...
Page 58: ...5 8 Editing Conventions Special Button Functions...
Page 130: ...6 72 Program Mode Programming Tips...
Page 202: ...7 72 Setup Mode Recording A Setup To Song Mode...
Page 206: ...8 4 Quick Access Mode The QA Editor...
Page 232: ...9 26 Effects Mono Algorithms...
Page 268: ...11 18 Master Mode Preview Sample PRVIEW...
Page 302: ...12 34 Song Mode and the Song Editor Song Editor The EVENT Page...
Page 328: ...14 14 Keymap and Sample Editing Editing Samples...
Page 334: ...B 4...
Page 370: ...D 32 PC3K Objects V 1 31 Effect Chains...
Page 372: ...E 2 PC3K Legacy File Conversion Object Types and Conversion Details...