User guide
CUEMIX FX
100
outside the critical frequency range of the 
instrument being recorded, you can avoid phase 
problems among the mic signals.
Tuning PA systems
The Phase Analysis window can also be used to 
troubleshoot and tune PAs and sound 
reinforcement systems by placing microphones in 
strategic locations, comparing the two signals in 
the Phase Analysis grid and looking for phase 
issues at various locations.
Summing to mono
The Phase Analysis window is ideal for checking 
stereo audio that needs to be summed to mono. 
The Phase Analysis lets you see what frequencies 
will be canceled out when summed.
In the rectangular view, any lines in the signal that 
touch the +1.0 or -1.0 vertical lines in the grid will 
be canceled out at the frequency where they touch, 
when the signal is summed to mono.
In the polar view, any signal that falls on the 
negative y axis (below zero) in polar view will be 
canceled out when the signal is summed to mono.
Checking for phase issues in stereo tracks
You can use the Phase Analysis window to check 
the overall polarity of a stereo mix. Figure 10-54 is 
an example of a full stereo mix that has phase 
issues, as indicated by the majority of the signal’s 
energy, which is predominantly skewed to the left 
side of the rectangular view (left) and spread along 
the -y axis in the polar view (right).
Figure 10-54: A stereo mix with phase issues.
CONFIGURATIONS MENU
A configuration is just like a hardware preset (a 
“snapshot” of all settings in CueMix FX and 
therefore the UltraLite-mk3 hardware itself), 
except that it can be created and managed using the 
CueMix FX software on your computer, completely 
independently of the UltraLite-mk3 hardware. The 
commands in the Configurations menu let you 
create, save, load, import, export and otherwise 
manage as many configurations as you wish.
Figure 10-53: Two identical audio streams in the Phase Analysis.
Perfectly in phase One-sample delay Twenty-sample delay
Polar view
Rectangular 
view
Inverted










