I previously wrote here:
If you put your main reverb in the 'Monitor' instead of Aux, you made a stereo Reverb. And as an xtra, in the bus panel, you can send some delay or so to the 'monitor'=reverb as well. This makes the reality feel stronger.
This seemed to me. This is not really true, because of the way most reverbs are built. Read on.
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: at0mic on 2002-03-30 10:07 ]</font>
Reverb via Monitor on PulsarMixer
Now that's a way to be sure I tested them w dry sound of, playing sequence of hard left, hard rigth panned samples. Here's what I came up with, quite to my surprise:
)-> MasterVerb Classic, MasterVerb, E-Reflector and STW 4080L mix both 'L/R In' to one common entry for the verb unit. When feeding them L/R, and switching 'stereo In' to 'left only', no difference is heard.
)-> Only the PT reverbs (I tested the 20 series) are built up of two parallel mono reverbs.
I'll correct my tip/trick above.
at0mic
)-> MasterVerb Classic, MasterVerb, E-Reflector and STW 4080L mix both 'L/R In' to one common entry for the verb unit. When feeding them L/R, and switching 'stereo In' to 'left only', no difference is heard.
)-> Only the PT reverbs (I tested the 20 series) are built up of two parallel mono reverbs.
I'll correct my tip/trick above.
at0mic