🇨🇦 Hi, Hope this reaches you. I have been watching your sound advice videos with Rob on RU-vid and they are very helpful. We are running a Qu24 in a House of Worship. Two questions: Will you be making "a how to record video"? That would be interesting.On your RU-vid channel it references Canada. Just curious...we are in Guelph Ontario. 🇨🇦
Can you do a video or describe the use of the PAFL. My question is when you have the PAFL engaged does it prevent the signal to go out to the monitors? I have a camera connected to the monitor out and it seems when the soundboard operator engages the PAFL I lose my signal from the soundboard into my camera. Thank you.
David Centifanto Actually my latest video on Gain Staging covers PAFL. Check it out for a full explanation. As to your camera sound, using PAFL should not interrupt sound to monitors but it depends how you have that camera channel setup. Tell me a little more about how you are monitoring the camera
@@soundadvicewithrob3083 I have a cable plugged into the left monitor out. It appears when the sound tech uses the PAFL I lose the signal coming out of the sound board.
@@soundadvicewithrob3083 We have the Qu-32 On the rear there are the Main L/R jacks on the rear. I am using the L the R goes to the house monitors. We have a mono configuration.
Sorry for the confusion. The terms Mains and monitors typically refers to 2 diff set of speakers. Since you are using LR main outs, do you also lose sound in the Right output when you use PFL. Head scratcher trying to come up with a scenario where PFL would mute ANY outputs. It should only direct the selected channel signal to the headphones and the meter display.
Use the I/O patch tab then the dsnake out tab to assign outputs. I cant attach pics here but see page 73 in the manual. www.allen-heath.com/media/Qu-Mixer-Reference-Guide-AP9372_10.pdf#page73
Thx for the question. There are several ways to setup a monitor mix for the drummer using headphones. Heres my suggestion... choose a Mix to be used as the drummers monitor mix. Rather than send that mix to an amp or speaker, send the Mix signal to a small mixer controlled by the drummer. Something small such as a Yamaha MG06 (there are lots of 2-ch mixers to choose from). The drummer could then simply plug headphones into the small mixer and have full control of both the incoming Mix signal and the headphone volume.