Makes sense, and I don't just say that to make you feel good, it really does.

I do see where you're going with that.

Chris.

----- Original Message ----- From: "Kevin Reeves" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2011 9:04 PM
Subject: Re: Bad quality: I just don't get it!


Here's why we call it flat. Think of a graphic EQ, which has sliders for each frequency range. If we leave them all at their middle positions, the panel looks like a flat line along the surface of the sliders. That's flat. If you start gradually boosting or cutting a range of sliders, it literally forms a curve. If you drastically cut a few, but not others around it, it's called a notch, which visually looks like a notch taken out of that flat line we had before.

Oh, Kevin! O? kayyy, That? would explain then why it sounded so bad! I thought by flat you literally! meant like flat, like nothing, like, all the fricken way down! like turn the dial high and low all the way to the left as far down as they'd go. No wonder it sounded muddy! God I feel stupid! I guess when you say flat, what you meant was more, half way up, straight up at 12. Why do I have to be so literal all the time. LOLOLOLOLOLOLOL!

Chris.

----- Original Message ----- From: "Kevin Reeves" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2011 8:11 PM
Subject: Re: Bad quality: I just don't get it!


I haven't looked at the track yet. I'm shooting some video today, so may open it tonight. When I mean flat, I'm saying that the dials have to be at 12 OClock. When you feel the detent in the knob as your turning it, that's flat, it's the center most point of the dial. When you turn it to the left, you're cutting. When you turn to the right of the notch, you're boosting. Hope this helps.

Kevin=

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