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***This setup uses the following assumptions, but it should be easy enough to tweak for your needs.***
1.) You don’t want the “dry delay” (the FX1 return) by itself in your final mix, instead you only want the “wet delay:” that is the delay+reverb: the repeats with verb on them.
2.) The only thing you want reverb on is the repeats: you don’t want reverb on the other channels.
3.) You currently have a vocal subgroup with the vocal channels and FX returns routed to it, and that subgroup is routed to LR. You do not have the vocal channels/fx returns routed directly to LR.
Access the LR mix.
Access the top layer.
Ensure that the LR master, vox group master, FX1 send master and FX2 send master are all turned up.
Pull the FX1 and FX2 return faders down to -inf.
Access the vox group using the button on the RHS of the console.
Un-assign the FX1 return from your vocal subgroup (press and hold assign, ensure FX1 Return’s Sel button is not illuminated. If it is illuminated, press it so that it dims.)
Access the FX2 mix.
Press and hold the assign button. Ensure that FX1 return’s Sel button is illuminated. If it isn’t, press it so that it is. This allows FX1’s (delay) output to feed FX2’s (reverb) input.
Press and hold the pre-fade button on the LHS of the console. Ideally none of the Sel buttons will light up. This means that all the stereo channels and FX returns are feeding the presently accessed mix (FX2) post-fader. If they (particularly FX1 return’s Sel button) are lit up, this means they’re feeding FX2 pre-fader. Press the illuminated SEL buttons so they dim, changing the channels to feed the FX2 mix post-fader. Once you’ve confirmed that FX1 return is feeding the FX2 mix post-fader, you can release the Pre fade button.
^IIRC the above assignment and tap points are there by default, you’re just confirming them.
Raise the FX1 fader to unity.
Change to the bottom layer and pull down any channel sends to -inf. As per assumption2 above, the only thing we want feeding this reverb engine is the FX1 return.
Access your FX1 mix.
Push some vocal channels into the FX1 mix. Of course you won’t hear any change, as the FX1 return has been un-assigned from your subgroups and LR, but if you look at your meters page (as long as you’ve got signal on the vocal channels,) you should see the signal on the FX1 return.
Access the LR mix.
Ensure you’ve accessed your LR mix: if you’re still mixing to FX1 the following will create a feedback loop, and that would be bad.
Change to the top layer.
Raise the FX1 return fader. The way things are set up, this fader is effectively the equivalent of the pot that controlled how much delay you were dumping into the reverb on your old M-One XL. The higher you raise this fader, the more of the delay FX you send to the reverb engine.
Finally, to hear the repeats with their reverberation, raise the FX2 return.