1
- At the top left of the default screen you find the input selection for 2Ch, 4Ch, Aux and
Opti (digital). The small 1 is the MIX button that will sum the speaker level inputs.
2
- This row shows the input for each output channel, chosen from the drop-down.
3
- Enter the distance in cm for each driver here so the DSP can figure the delay. Enter
distances by cm > click SetMax > then click DelayCalc.
4
- There you click the drop-down to choose the function of each speaker.
5
- The crossover section lets you choose crossover points and slopes.
6
- You can set the phase of each speaker to 0° or 180°.
7
- The Signal delay is displayed here and you can make fine adjustments to the delay here
as well.
8
- The muting section allows to mute the channels you do not want to here. The solo
function muted all channels accept the one you have clicked. You can also link a group of
channels to control them together for delay and output level.
9
- Sliders control the relative output of each channel as well as overall gain.
10
- The information bar tells what you are doing to the signal and also lets you link
channel pairs for EQ and Crossover settings. You also choose the GEQ or PEQ here.
11
- The graph section show as little or as much as you want. The boxes at the right can be
checked or unchecked to show the crossover and EQ settings for each channel or for all
channels. For the active channel you will always see the crossover points and EQ curve.
12
- When you click on the GEQ button the 31-band EQ screen takes the top section of the
GUI. The frequencies are listed at the top and you can make adjustments by dragging the
sliders or by clicking a slider and using the keyboard arrows to move the sliders in .5dB
steps. You can also adjust the Q if the filters. NOTE: EQ is set first by GEQ and can only be
set once. All later equalization should be set with PEQ or GEQ will be reset.
Now you have a quick run-down of the DSP-Z8 IV functions. The accompanying manual will
take you through the system complete set-up.