6
TT24 DIGITAL LIVE CONSOLE
TT24 DIGIT
AL LIVE C
ONS
OLE
8 Line Inputs
• 4-band parametric EQ
• Stereo linking
Main Outputs (LEFT, RIGHT, CTR/MONO)
• Compressor/Limiter
• 6-band parametric EQ (includes dual kill filters)
• 31-band graphic EQ
•
L/R + Mono
or
LCR
modes of operation
12 Aux Sends
• Compressor/Limiter
• 6-band parametric EQ (includes dual kill filters)
• Stereo linking
8 Flex-Groups with 8 Assignable DSP Blocks
• Compressor/Limiter
• 4-band parametric EQ
• Mono, Stereo, LCR, and VCA modes of operation
8 Matrix Outputs
• 600 ms delay is available to matrix outputs
4 Internal Stereo Effects
• Reverb
• Gated Reverb
• Mono/Stereo/Ping-Pong Delay
• Chorus
• Flanger
1.3 Terminology and
Conventions
The following terms and conventions are used
throughout this manual.
• Touchscreen and console controls are represented
in bold type using their exact spelling and capital-
ization (i.e., press the
ANLG
bank button).
• Touchscreen and console areas are represented by
capital letters in plain type (i.e., press the
PAN
but-
ton in the
V-POT CONTROL
area).
•
Activate
pertains to switches/buttons that toggle
between two values and means “press the button
until it lights.”
•
Deactivate
pertains to switches/buttons that toggle
between two values and means “press the button
until it is not lit.”
•
ADC
means analog-to-digital converter
•
DAC
means digital-to-analog converter
•
Intercancel
means that pushing one button simul-
taneously selects that button and automatically
deselects the previously selected button. One but-
ton is always active. For example, the Bank Select
buttons intercancel. Radio button is another term
often used to describe this behavior, originating
from the push buttons that selected radio stations
in pre-1960s cars.
The Touchscreen is a new interface to most audio
engineers that requires some new terminology.
•
Touch
pertains to selection on the Touchscreen
(i.e., Touch the EQ button).
•
Select
describes touching a button or checkbox such
that it is activated. This allows a single instruction
to describe this action without knowing the control’s
previous state. For example, if the control is not
selected, touching the control once selects it. If it is
already selected, no action is required.