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2017/01/09 at 1:42 pm #60427
As A&H introduces the new DLive C class at NAMM 2017 it really seems if GLD has reached EOL. ;-(
2016/11/23 at 9:57 pm #59492When your Direct Out of the channel is correctly mapped to your IO-Card channel, then probably the direct out volume is set too low.
Check on the channels routing page on the direct out tab which volume you have set there.
2016/11/19 at 7:25 am #59399Hello,
Are there any updates for the maintenance release.
Yesterday I also had to rework over 60 scenes because another channel was added to the strip although strip assignment was globally safe.Thanks
2016/10/27 at 6:49 pm #58922In Addition: Default setting for Trim is 0.0dB and Gain is 27 dB. You can set the defaults on the preamp page by holding the physical reset key and press the SEL buttons on the screen in the preamp and trim area.
2016/10/27 at 6:44 pm #58921Hi Tom.
There is not only a gain but also a digital trim for each input on the GLD.
Probably the trim was once set to be on the knob of the surface.
Please check the input for your mic channel by hitting select on that channel and move to the preamp page on the screen.
Check both settings: The one for gain and the one for trim.Probably that helps.
Best regards,
Edi2016/10/21 at 6:08 am #58767Thanks Mike for putting my attention on that.
Seems it has been released with the QU DAW driver.
2016/08/16 at 8:04 am #57662Hi Adam,
As I expect, that this isn’t an issue regarding a faulty thumb drive plugged into the board, I supsect that it has to do with the fader circuit boards, which, as far as I know, are also connected to the GLD main board via USB.
There has been a forum post some time ago with pictures from the inside of the GLD.
Maybe this helps: https://community.allen-heath.com/forums/topic/inside-gld80 but I think you will have to make demands on the A&H support or on your dealer.Best regards,
Dieter2016/07/31 at 7:28 pm #57462Hi, thanks for your answers.
It sounds logical that rtpMidi implements Midi via RTP and not TCP, although I don’t fully understand the difference, but seem to be different protocols. I will have a deeper reading about the difference. I’m wondering if it is really a proprietary protocol, because why reinvent the wheel? TCP as also Midi are standards as far as I know…
It would be really great if someone from A&H could bring some details about how Midi via TCP is handled by the GLD or is the Midi implementation document and the info that a client should listen to port 51325 everything we need to know to get it to work?
Which protocol is used? TCP?There has been a blog post from Nicola that they are investigating on the usability of rtpMidi for Windows users. Is there a follow up? Why do the Windows users have a lower priority for A&H compared to Mac? (no DAW driver, no Midi…)
The GLD really is a great console, but not all features have reached the goal where they could be…
I keep up trying to get the GLD <-> Windows midi communication to work and will share my findings.
Best regards,
Edi2016/06/01 at 8:00 am #56232What type (AUX, group, matrix) is your submix?
In the signal chain of the mixer only the matrix is situated behind the main mix fader, so a post fader submix of the mains to the matrix will be influenced by changing the main fader.
For example a post fader submix to a subgroup will be like a second independent mix of all the assigned channels like the main mix itself. If you would route the channels post fader to the group AND to the main mix at the same time and the group also is assigned to the main mix the result would be 6dB more level on the main meters as the sum is a doubling of the channel signals.Hope that helps.
2016/04/19 at 8:51 am #55154Hi Andy,
In the file menu of the GLD editor, there is an option “USB drive”.
There you can choose and connect to your stick .Best regards,
Edi2016/03/05 at 10:14 pm #54421Hi John,
When you are mixing to Aux 1, the channel fader is the aux send knob you may be used to on an analogue console. In the analogue world you also had to turn the Aux knob independent of pre/post if you wanted to send signal to the aux bus.
Try the following: Set the send to Aux1 mix as pre, now press mix button on master LR mix. Channel faders show now the main mix levels. Lower fader for IP1 to -infinite. No signal is sent to main mix. Now press mix button for Aux1. Channel faders now show the levels sent to the Aux1 bus. If you now raise fader for IP1 it is if you turn the analogue Aux knob. You send the pre fader signal (because the fader for the main mix is still completely lowered!) to the aux bus.
In a aux post fader configuration you would not send any signal to the aux bus, as long as the channel does not send signal to the main LR mix.
Hope this helps.
Best regards,
Edi2016/02/19 at 12:16 pm #54054Hi Dave,
I’ve no experience with other expansion card’s than Waves Soundgrid, which I use and find really great.
You can have a look at https://www.allen-heath.com/series/gld-audio-networking/Best regards,
Edi2016/02/18 at 8:01 pm #54044Ooops, just saw, that there is a rackmount kit available for it…
Sorry, my fault.But I have a suggestion for the rackmount kit:
Would be great if the panel would include front connectors to rewire the audioracks side connectors permanently to the front.Best regards,
Edi2016/02/18 at 1:05 pm #54029Hi Dave,
USB recording on GLD only supports stereo from a bus assigned to the USB record in (eg. LR mix, stereo group, matrix, etc.)
Multichannel recording directly to USB like with QuDrive on the QU series is not supported for GLD.Best regards,
Edi2016/01/13 at 10:47 pm #53289Why should it have to be the summed pre fade level signal? The hint with the already existing PFL Option was just to show, that it is possible to hear a signal where physically no signal is.
I would prefer the channel meters to behave live the meters on a subgroup channel.
Just show the sum of the post fader signals of the channels controlled by the DCA. -
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