Specifications

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G-WARE SOFTWARE FILTER CONFIGURATION
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To begin, click Add Filter. This adds a filter to the graph.
Select the filter Type in the Type drop-down menu. Note that the other
menus change, depending on which filter you select. You can use these
menus to customize the filter, or use the mouse to click and drag the
node on the graph to a location that reflects the changes you wish to
make.
You can continue to add filters to the graph, and track their relationships
to each other to design a system with the sound characteristics
necessary for good audio.
Phase plots the phase response of the frequency response of the
selected filter.
Bypass All bypasses all filters.
Add Filter adds a filter to the graph.
Remove Filter removes the selected filter from the graph.
Table View toggles between the Processing Filters Window graph view
and the Processing Filters Window table view. The table view allows you
to configure filters in a table format rather than on the graph, and
provides an easy way to check filter status.
Processing Channels allows you to display the graphs of various
processing channels together, so you can view and easily modify filter
and equalizer settings throughout the frequency range. Click the
respective letter to place a processor in the graph. Click the Active
processor you wish to modify; it appears in bold on the graph.
Refer to the example shown in the Low/Mid/High Loudspeaker Driver
window on page 50. Note that as you create filters across several
processing channels, you can observe their crossover points and
general shape of the frequency response. In this case, several Linkwitz-
Riley filters are being created across three processing channels to
establish a balanced frequency response from low-frequency,
midrange, and high-frequency transducers.