How to use the Chroma Console as a Hardware Plugin / Outboard Effects in your DAW

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  • Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025

Комментарии • 13

  • @Guitarpch1
    @Guitarpch1 10 дней назад

    Great video

  • @lionhead7497
    @lionhead7497 9 дней назад

    fantastic

  • @Delano876
    @Delano876 9 дней назад

    so i guess you don’t need a reamp box then great video

    • @OffShiftProductions
      @OffShiftProductions  5 дней назад

      correct, Chroma Console can handle line level signals. Thanks for watching!

  • @ThisWorldNeedzaHero
    @ThisWorldNeedzaHero 21 день назад

    Great info! Thank you for this.

  • @Guitarpch1
    @Guitarpch1 5 дней назад

    Hey man, I’m new to this stuff… I have an Audient ID44 mkii interface which has insert sends and returns… should I use the inserts or the line outs to go into my pedals , and what are the reasons to use one or the other? Thanks for the vids!

    • @OffShiftProductions
      @OffShiftProductions  5 дней назад

      So with that interface the sends/returns on channel 1 and 2 are only going to effect whatever you run through those channels. So, if you run your guitar through channel one for example, and you use the send to go in to a pedal and the return to take that signal back in, you're just affecting that live signal on channel one. In your case, use the line outs to go in to your pedals if you are wanting to effect already recorded sounds out of your DAW. Sends/returns are basically a way to bake in effects as you record them if that makes sense.

  • @ektopia
    @ektopia 21 день назад

    That was really interesting. However, I could see some latency in the waveforms. Do you fix that afterward?

    • @OffShiftProductions
      @OffShiftProductions  21 день назад

      @@ektopia you can for sure nudge afterward. As mentioned in the other comment, Studio One has the Pipeline Plugin to automatically resolve any latency. Otherwise you can do a loopback test and change your record offset to compensate that way.