[Rwp] the accessability of busses in the latest version of reeaccess?
theoreomonster at reaperaccess.com
theoreomonster at reaperaccess.com
Thu Nov 5 08:09:05 EST 2015
Actually setting your sends pre fader won’t make it so there is no blend or mixed signal . That just makes it so adjusting the track volume doesn’t affect the signal being sent to the bus or *Send*. If I am not mistaken Sends are post fx and pre fader by default. If you want to use a send and not have a blend or mix of the wet and dry signals, you need to uncheck the send to master check box in each of the tracks TrackInfoDialog. Using the previous example of a reverb bus, If you only wanted the wet reverb sound and no blend of the Un-Reverbed dry signal, You would go through all the Guitar tracks and uncheck the send to master check box in the track info dialog. . When you do this the track that is the Send also acts as a single fader for controlling volume/pan/etc for all the tracks that are sent to it.
> On Nov 4, 2015, at 8:24 PM, Chris Belle via RWP <rwp at bluegrasspals.com> wrote:
>
> If you don't want a mixed signal, you can always set your sends pre fader.
> You have to use object nav in the i/o dialogue to get that context menu,
> if using NVDA, but it's a very flexible way to work.
> just like all the pro routing options with a traditional board but better.
>
>
> On 11/4/2015 6:10 PM, theoreomonster--- via RWP wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> Reaper doesn’t deal with busses in the traditional sense that other DAWs do. This basically means that there is nothing called a bus. However the workflows that one would use a bus for work exactly the same in reaper. In reaper a track can be an audio track, a midi track or a “bus” and its defend as such based on how the track is set up an used. Lets use the example of routing all the guitars to the same reverb .
>>
>> Step one creat a new track in reaper.
>> and name it Reverb.
>> Then add the reverb you want to use to this track in its normal fx area.
>> Then you will need to Send audio from each of the guitar tracks to this track with the reverb on it.
>> Someone who uses windows can chime in here on the best way to set up sends but you will need to navigate to each guitar track press I to pull up the track info dial and navigate to where it says sends and from that drop down menu choose the reverb track. In this dialog is also where you can manipulate the send level..
>> Alternatively from the reverb track you can press i and add a receive from each of the guitar tracks The advantage of this is you can *send* all the guitar tracks from one window instead of going to each of their individual tracks and setting up a send.
>>
>> Busses or Sends/Receives as they are known in reaper are great in cases where you want to blend the dry signal with the effected signal. Track folders can also perform a lot of the same functionality as bus but are more useful for cases when you want to only have the effected signal and not have the dry signal blended back in.
>>
>> I will let someone else on here speak to how to set up folders as if memory serves correct the way the track headers read and how ou navigate them on windows is different from how its spoken/navigated on OSX.
>> up
>>> On Nov 4, 2015, at 5:31 PM, trahern culver via RWP <rwp at bluegrasspals.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> hi guys thanks for your help, what i mean by using busses for mixdowns is can i use busses to group tracks together when effect processing? and is this accessible? help with this would be really cool kind regards trey.
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