- FL = 0FL/100FR
- SR = 100FL/0FR
How is this supposed to work? Am I approaching this wrong ? (If an image would be easier to show the example, I could probably link one)
Thanks!
EDIT: Forgot to mention that I am on GW6.32 on Windows 10
You are not showing surround-left (or front-right) at all! There are 36 faders and you are only showing 4.What I noticed is instead of expecting the Surround Left to be blasting the left channel until it faded out...
I understand what you are getting to, thanks. So if I'm looking for something like the following where I take an original stereo audio track and want it to be "super-wide" as in the definition of:You are not showing surround-left (or front-right) at al..
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SL = 100L% - 75L% balance from left audio track
FL = 75L% - 25L% balance from left audio track
C = 25L% - 25R% balance from both audio tracks
FR = 25R% - 75R% balance from right audio track
SR = 75R% - 100R% balance from right audio track
If you are starting with a 2-channel stereo track you should make a new 5.1 channel track and copy the stereo file into it. Then you'll have all 6 channels to "play with" and you'll see the full multi-channel mixer.I have a 6 (5.1) channel test file that pans...
…where I take an original stereo audio track
If you want to make it "non-directional" or "all-directional", start by mixing all channels equally... If you've got a 2-channel file, just mix 50/50 into all 5 channels. Then give it a listen. If your original is 5.1 channels, mix all 5 channels equally into all 5 channels at 20% each.Would it make sense if instead of saying "super-wide", that it's more of a "wrap around"? In essence, the furthermost left balances would instead be sent to the surround speaker & same for the right so that it "wraps around the listener".