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CHAPTER 10 |
37
AM MENU
♦
Switching to
Intermediate
mode makes a significantly larger number of controls available and is much
more akin to Expert mode than Basic. For instance, the three simple controls for multiband adjustments
in Basic mode are replaced by three entire menus that allow complete control over parameters like attack
rate, release rate, targets, and thresholds for each band of the multiband AGC’s and multiband limiters.
♦
Intermediate mode is best suited for anyone who knows the art of processing well, understands how these
controls work and interact with one another, and wants to fine tune their sound with tools that are not
available in Basic mode.
♦
Expert
mode makes visible every available control in Omnia.7, including some that are admittedly rarely
used by anyone except factory preset authors. While there are some very powerful controls available in
this mode, our experience with Omnia.9 over the past several years (the product upon which Omnia.7
is based) is that they are best left alone unless you are intimately familiar with the intricacies of these
products and have a very specific need to make changes to these settings.
♦
But as we sometimes say, “We just build the Ferrari - we don’t issue driver’s licenses”, so all of the tools
are here regardless of whether they get used to set a record lap time or crash before the green flag finishes
dropping!
Switching Between Modes
The current mode is part of the
About Preset
menu (more about that control later). The important thing to
remember is that you can freely switch back and forth between Basic, Intermediate, and Expert modes without
losing any settings.
This is an important ability and not one widely offered in other processors that feature multiple levels of user
adjustment, and it affords you the flexibility to do something like this to hone your sound: Pick a preset that’s close
to the sound you are after, do some fundamental adjustments to the bass in Basic mode, switch to Intermediate for
some bass fine tuning, go back to Basic mode to open up the dynamics a bit, go back into Intermediate to adjust the
attack time of a single band, then go back to Basic to set the final clipper to achieve the desired loudness. In other
words, you are never locked into the Intermediate or Advanced modes once you’ve left the Basic mode.
Processing in Basic Mode
Switching to and from Basic mode is done in the
AM > Processing > About Preset
menu.
The
Processing
menu in Basic mode contains eleven sub-menus, including
Load Preset, Save Preset, Preset
Protection, About Preset, Input Conditioning, Enhance, Gain Riding, Multiband, Final, Bypass
and
Clipper.
The
front panel only has room to display the first nine so be sure to move “down” to see the last two. (Yet another great
reason to use the NfRemote app instead of the front panel interfaceJ).