Roland M-16DX - Manual

Roland M-16DX

Roland M-16DX – Manual, read for free online in PDF format. We hope this helps you resolve any issues you may have. If you have further questions, please contact us through the contact form.

1 Page 1
2 Page 2
3 Page 3
4 Page 4
5 Page 5
6 Page 6
7 Page 7
8 Page 8
9 Page 9
10 Page 10
11 Page 11
12 Page 12
13 Page 13
14 Page 14
Page: / 14

Table of Contents:

  • Page 2 – About the Workshop Booklets; Owner’s Manual; About This Booklet; Using the M-16DX as a DAW Controller; Understanding the Symbols in This Booklet; Hot Links; The Basics of Working with a DAW; audio gets into a DAW
  • Page 3 – How Audio Gets Into a DAW; Audio arrives at an M-16DX input channel—; How You Listen to What You’re Doing; In a multitrack session—; About Multitrack Session Monitoring; Latency; little; Zero-Latency Monitoring; What you hear is not
  • Page 4 – including its metronome and/or already-recorded; About Two-Track Session Monitoring; Setting Up
  • Page 5 – Downloading Drivers; PC—; Windows XP Driver Installation
  • Page 6 – Select
  • Page 7 – About Driver Signing Options; Category View—; Mac OS X Driver Installation
  • Page 8 – System Settings for Your Computer; Optimizing Your Windows PC for Audio
  • Page 9 – Background Services; Using the M-16DX for System Sounds; Sending Windows XP System Sounds to the M-16DX
  • Page 10 – Sending Mac OS X System Sounds to the M-16DX
  • Page 11 – The M-16DX Driver Settings; Windows XP; Matching Sample Rates; Using the M-16DX with a DAW
  • Page 12 – you listen to the M-16DX main mix in your control room—; Session Monitoring Procedures; Listening in a Multitrack Session; On the LEVEL; Balancing Your Monitoring Mix; As you record, you’ll set up your monitor mix by
  • Page 13 – Using Effects in Your Monitoring Mix; Two-Track Session Monitoring; What You Hear Is Exactly What You Get; The Role of the USB Button in Two-Track Recording; recording—; Recording Setup Procedures; Select the Audio You Want to Record
  • Page 14 – Arm and Record Your Track; Playing Back Your Recording; EDIROL
Loading the manual

1

Workshop

M-16DX

16-Channel Digital Mixer

© 2007 Roland Corporation U.S.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the written permission of Roland Corporation U.S.

Windows XP™, Windows XP 64-bit Edition™ , Windows Vista™, and Windows Vista 64-bit Edition™ are trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. Microsoft Corporation is not associated or affiliated with Roland in any manner.

Mac OS X™ is a trademark of Apple Inc. Apple Inc. is not associated or affiliated with Roland in any manner.

M16DXWS05

Using the M-16DX with a DAW

"Loading the manual" means you need to wait until the file loads and becomes available for online reading. Some manuals are very large, and the time they take to appear depends on your internet speed.

Summary

Page 2 - About the Workshop Booklets; Owner’s Manual; About This Booklet; Using the M-16DX as a DAW Controller; Understanding the Symbols in This Booklet; Hot Links; The Basics of Working with a DAW; audio gets into a DAW

2 About the Workshop Booklets The EDIROL M-16DX 16-Channel Digital Mixer delivers the power of digital mixing to musicians at an incredibly affordable price. This crystal-clear 24-bit digital mixer supports sample rates up to 96 kHz, and it’s extremely flexible, with a wide range of analog and digit...

Page 3 - How Audio Gets Into a DAW; Audio arrives at an M-16DX input channel—; How You Listen to What You’re Doing; In a multitrack session—; About Multitrack Session Monitoring; Latency; little; Zero-Latency Monitoring; What you hear is not

3 How Audio Gets Into a DAW Once you’ve set everything up: Audio arrives at an M-16DX input channel— • When you connect a mic, instrument, or other audio device to an M-16DX input jack, its audio is automatically routed to the corresponding M-16DX input channel. You select the desired M-16DX channel...

Page 4 - including its metronome and/or already-recorded; About Two-Track Session Monitoring; Setting Up

4 When you listen to the M-16DX stereo main mix bus with zero-latency monitoring, what you hear is what you’re recording— • directly through its M-16DX channel. the DAW’s output— • including its metronome and/or already-recorded tracks, through M-16DX Channel 13/14. or Channel 13/14’s USB button is ...

Other Roland Models

All Roland Other