
28
28
PreSonus StudioLive
™
24.4.2
Quick S
tar
t:
Lev
el
Setting
Ov
er
view
Hook
up
Connec
ting
to
a
Comput
er
Tut
orials
Technic
al
Inf
orma
tion
Trouble
-
shooting
and W
arr
an
ty
Scenes
, P
resets
, S
yst
em Menu
,
and MIDI C
on
trol
Sof
tw
ar
e: Univ
ersal C
on
trol
,
SL Remot
e, C
aptur
e,
and S
tudio O
ne A
rtist
4 Controls
Con
trols
28
4.1 The Fat Channel
Compressor
Attack
Sets and Displays the Compressor
AttackAttack Setting for the Selected
Input Channel or Output Bus.
This encoder sets, and the meter
displays, the compressor’s attack
setting for the selected channel or
output bus. Attack sets the speed
at which the compressor acts on
the input signal. A slow attack time
(fully clockwise) allows the
beginning component of a signal
(commonly referred to as the initial
transient) to pass through,
uncompressed, whereas a fast
attack time (fully counterclockwise)
triggers compression immediately
when a signal exceeds the
threshold. You can set the attack
from 0.2 to 150 milliseconds.
Compressor
Release
Sets and Displays the Compressor Release
Setting for the Selected Input Channel or
Output Bus.
This encoder sets, and the meter
displays, the release setting of the
compressor for the selected
channel or output bus. Release sets
the length of time the compressor
takes to return the gain reduction
back to zero (no gain reduction)
after crossing below the
compression threshold. Release
can be set from 40 to 1,000
milliseconds.
Power User Tip:
Very short release times
can produce a choppy or “jittery” sound,
especially when compressing instruments
that have a lot of low-frequency
components, such as bass guitar. Very long
release times can result in an overcompressed, or
“squashed,” sound. All ranges of release can be
useful, however, and you should experiment to
become familiar with different sonic possibilities.
Compressor
Makeup Gain
Sets and Displays the Amount of Makeup
Gain for the Compressor on the Selected
Input Channel or Output Bus.
This encoder sets, and the meter
displays, the makeup-gain setting
of the compressor for the selected
channel or output bus. When
compressing a signal, gain
reduction usually results in an
overall attenuation of level. The
gain control allows you to restore
this loss in level and readjust the
volume to the precompression
level (if desired). You can adjust
Makeup Gain from 0 dB (no gain
adjustment) to +28 dB.