System information
n  Connect your sound cards'  outputs to the appropriate inputs on a 6-channel amplifier/home theater
  receiver. Connect front, rear, center, and LFE speakers to the amplifier.
Multiple sound card  setups may not work with ASIO drivers. You can only use a single ASIO  driver at a 
time, and some ASIO drivers can conflict with other audio  driver models (such as WDM and wave 
drivers).
The audio cables you'll  need will depend on your specific hardware. For a typical application,   you'll 
need three cables: each will have a 3.5 mm stereo plug on one end  and dual RCA connectors on the 
other.
5.1 surround panning and mixing
After you've set up your project  for 5.1 surround mixing, the track headers and Mixing Console switch to 5.1 
surround mode, and you're ready to start panning.
From the View menu, choose Surround  Panner to toggle the display of the Surround Panner window. Use  
the Surround Panner window to pan tracks, busses, and assignable effects  chains.
If you have a joystick,  you can use it to control surround panning. A force-feedback joystick  such as the 
Microsoft® SideWinder® Force Feedback 2 joystick can add a  tactile element to your editing sessions. For 
more information, see "Using a Joystick for Panning, Adjusting Controls, and Color Correction" on page 
554.
Only  the Surround Master bus accepts 5.1 channel inputs. If you assign  a track to another bus, the 
Mixing Console will send a stereo output to  the bus, and you can perform surround panning at the bus 
level.
When you apply effects to a 5.1 surround project, you can use  distinct plug-in settings for each 
channel (separate EQ settings for the  front and surround speakers, for example) using effect  
automation. For more information, see "Automating Audio Effect Parameters" on page 263. Add 
multiple instances of the plug-in to the track  effects chain and select the Enable  check boxes in the FX 
Automation Chooser for the channels you want each  instance of the plug-in to affect.
Surround panning is not available for tracks or busses that are routed to a hardware output.
Muting or soloing channels
Muting a channel ensures that no audio will be played through that channel. For example, you could mute 
the center channel if you want to produce a stereo image at the center listening position, or you might want 
to solo the center channel when you're working with dialogue.
1. 
Double-click the surround panner   on the track or bus you want to pan. The Surround Panner 
window is displayed.
2.  Click the speaker icons to mute or include channels.
Hold Ctrl while clicking a speaker icon to solo the channel.
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