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Polarity, Input trim, Sweepable 4-band EQ with second order HP and LP filters, Compression, and 12 mix bus sends on every track Unlimited stereo or mono input channels, each with unlimited plugins, sends, and hardware inserts. The Mixbus32C engine is internally dithered, ramped, and gain staged so that sound quality is preserved as close to analog as possible
#Slate mti2 with mixbus 32c v5 series#
Precise emulation based on Harrison's famous 32 series analog console circuit designsįourth-generation Harrison "True Analog Mixing™" processing engine with enhanced compressor/limiter algorithms built-in sidechain busing, and increased plugin flexibility Precision algorithms for EQ, Filter, Compression, Analog Tape Saturation, and Summing Straightforward “knob per function” mixer layout based on Harrison's renowned 32-series music consoles Mixbus32C provides 12 stereo mix buses, each with individual level control, latency compensation, and associated master channel incorporating the highly successful Harrison tape saturation, bus compression, and tone control functionality. To run this complex DSP on every channel strip was impossible just 5 years ago. Every resistor, capacitor, and transistor was modeled.

#Slate mti2 with mixbus 32c v5 full#
By keeping up with these incremental technological steps through the decades, Harrison can now faithfully emulate the beautifully designed analog signal processing designs of the past and incorporate them into a full function “True Analog” mixing console within the digital audio workstation environment.Įach Mixbus32C channel strip incorporates an exact emulation of the original Harrison 32C parametric four-band sweepable EQ with a separately switchable filter section including second order high-pass and low-pass filters. Harrison has pioneered the use of high performance computer technology over the last 20 years to provide unmatched processing power in the world’s largest mixing environments. This traditional layout not only looks good but allows the engineer to approach the console as if it were a musical instrument, directly affecting the art of mixing and contributing greatly to the success of any given mix. Mixbus32C takes that concept to the natural next step by using the full resources of today’s technological advancements to precisely emulate not only the operational advantages, but to faithfully emulate the analog performance of the traditional analog console.īecause of the way the Mixbus32C mixer page is laid out, the most commonly used controls are displayed and are accessible at all times using a rich, high contrast, GUI design that gracefully and accurately emulates the original hardware version of the Harrison 32C console. Mixbus was hailed by the industry as a breakthrough for “in the box” mixing by incorporating decades of console building experience into a cost effective mixing platform for today. Mixbus32C is designed in the most operationally ergonomic manner possible. Harrison consoles are dynamically mature products – products that retain the benefits of long, successful experience while incorporating the best of all the new technology. The Mixbus faders are especially suited for touch screen since they are big and fat and easy to hit with touch without hitting the wrong pixels.Harrison Mixbus32C is as relevant today as the first Harrison 32 series consoles were 40 years ago. Aside from not (currently) having multitouch compatibility, single-touch works great with Mixbus. Mixbus is definitely making waves in the DAW world. If we can guarantee 50 or more users would buy a Raven for mixbus I could probably talk Slate into doing it." Quote:"It takes a lot of time to develop new DAW's so we would need to see a big market to start another DAW. Here's a quote from Jamey Z of Slate from one of several recent threads: Steven Slate has even acknowledged this over at Gearslutz:Īnd there has been a growing number of Mixbus requests over at the Slate forums. The Mixbus faders are especially suited for touch screen since they are big and fat and easy to hit with touch without hitting the wrong pixels.Īlso the guys over at Slate know that there is a growing number of salivating Mixbus users who would love to use a Raven in their workflow.
