Роман Осадчий,
какой вольтаж внутри цифрового звука?
Не, это то ясно ))
А чего они тогда тут пишут?
Once your signal is converted to digital, it will be represented as a series of numbers that you can see as voltage values. These voltages can have a maximum and minimum value of 1.0 and -1.0 respectively. Supposing your input signal is peaking at its higher possible value right before the clipping threshold of the converter, it will be represented as 1.0 inside your host and the TS-999 will react to it like if you're sending a 1.0V signal to its input stage.
Why is it so important to know these details? Because if your guitar pickup has a maximum output voltage higher than 1V (or 2V peak-to-peak), like many modern active pickups have, you'll need to adjust the input signal that's being sent to TS-999. That's where the Input Level control comes into play. You need to tweak it to compensate the voltage scaling/normalization made by your AD
6
converter.
Every tick you see under the Input Level slider, represents a variation of 0.25. For example, if your pickup has a maximum output of 1.5V (so 3V peak-to-peak), you'll need to set the slider at the 2nd tick moving it to the right. By doing this, your input will be multiplied by 1.5 (1 + 0.25 + 0.25 = 1.5), so the TS-999 will not be fed with a 1.0V maximum signal, instead, it'll get a 1.0V x 1.5 = 1.5V maximum signal, which is the correct value to match your pickup specifications.
If you are using a single coil, instead, and its maximum output value is, let's say, 0.5V, you'll need to lower the input level by moving the slider to the second tick to the left. This will make the TS-999 react like the input signal is 0.5V, or 1V x 0.5 (1 – 0.25 – 0.25 = 0.5).
У меня пассив, предположим, 0.5V на выходе - значит я регулятор Input у TS-999 двигаю влево? Что, учитывая записанный на -6Дб DI как-то странно...
Сорри за занудство, не понял я эту тему...