UltraLite-mk4 User Guide
UltraLite-mk4 User Guide
UltraLite-mk4 User Guide
User Guide
Title Page
Contents
Part 1: Getting Started
7
10
11
23
25
27
Software Installation
31
Hardware Installation
Presets
43
45
53
Mixer Effects
61
Part 3: Appendices
79
Troubleshooting
81
Audio Specifications
83
Mixer Schematics
87
Updating Firmware
89
Auto-on Mode
91
Index
III
This equipment has been type tested and found to comply with the limits for a class B digital device,
pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection
against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and can
radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual,
may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that
interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause interference to radio
or television equipment reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the
user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by any combination of the following measures:
Relocate or reorient the receiving antenna
Increase the separation between the equipment and the receiver
Update Policy
Plug the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected
In order to be eligible to obtain updates of the program, you must complete and return
the attached Mark of the Unicorn Purchaser Registration Card to MOTU.
If necessary, you can consult a dealer or experienced radio/television technician for additional
assistance.
Copyright Notice
PLEASE NOTE: only equipment certified to comply with Class B (computer input/output devices,
terminals, printers, etc.) should be attached to this equipment, and it must have shielded interface
cables in order to comply with the Class B FCC limits on RF emissions.
Copyright 2016 by Mark of the Unicorn, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this
publication may be reproduced, transmitted, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system,
or translated into any human or computer language, in any form or by any means
whatsoever, without express written permission of Mark of the Unicorn, Inc., 1280
Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA, 02138, U.S.A.
WARNING: changes or modifications to this unit not expressly approved by the party
responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to operate the equipment.
Part 1
Getting Started
Quick
CHAPTER Start Guide
Thank you for purchasing an UltraLite-mk4!
Follow these easy steps to get started quickly.
1 Download and run the MOTU Pro Audio
Installer found here:
http://www.motu.com/download
2 (Optional) For quick access to the
UltraLite-mk4 from your iPad or iPhone,
download the MOTU Discovery app from the
Apple App Store.
Preset
Application
Audio interface
Stand-alone mixer
Interface + mixer
Optical Converter
1. The UltraLite-mk4 operates as a USB MIDI interface, allowing MIDI software to communicate with connected MIDI
devices through the USB connection to the computer.
Connect a MIDI device here using standard MIDI cables.
Connect the UltraLite-mk4s MIDI OUT port to the MIDI IN
port on the other device. Conversely, connect the
UltraLite-mk4s MIDI IN port to the MIDI OUT port on the
other device. For further details, see MIDI connections on
page 35.
2. The ANALOG OUTPUTS provide additional analog output for
secondary studio monitors, surround monitoring, submixes or any other desired destination. These connectors
are balanced (tip/ring/sleeve), but they also accept an
unbalanced plug. They are DC-coupled. Control volume
from the MOTU Pro Audio Control web app or your host
audio software.
11
DEVICE TAB
6
10
11
4
3
2
12
13
14
15
Windows only
16
17
18
1. If you have two or more MOTU interfaces, the Devices list lets you choose
the one you are currently controlling
with the web app.
2. The Aux Mixing tab lets you view
each Aux bus in the mixer, one at a
time.
3. The Mixing tab gives you access to
the mixing and DSP in the interface.
4. The Routing tab displays a grid
matrix, where you can make direct
connections between inputs and
outputs, your computer and the
mixer.
5. The Device tab has settings for the
hardware itself, such as analog input
and output trim.
6. Expands and collapses the sidebar.
12
MOTU PRO AUDIO CONTROL WEB APP
19
20
21
13
MOTU PRO AUDIO CONTROL WEB APP
22
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24
25
27
26
14
MOTU PRO AUDIO CONTROL WEB APP
ROUTING TAB
4
10
11
2
12
13
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19
15
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16
15
MOTU PRO AUDIO CONTROL WEB APP
MIXING TAB
3
10
11
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32
31
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30
29
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24
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27
The Mixing tab gives you access to the
48-channel mixer in the UltraLite-mk4,
which provides a main mix bus, monitor
bus, three group busses, seven aux
busses, and a dedicated reverb bus. Use
the Device tab to configure how many
inputs you wish to work with (up to 48).
Use the Routing tab (page 15) to route
channels to the mixer inputs. Channels
can come from any source, such as the
physical inputs on the interface or
channels coming from the computer.
1. Shows and hides the Mixer Setup
sidebar (3), which lets you show and
hide channels, channel strip
settings, effects, and the Legend (6).
2. The Mixing tab selects the mixer.
3. Use the Mixer Setup sidebar to show
and hide elements in the mixer.
26
the top lets you create, name, save
and manage entire mixer presets.
16
MOTU PRO AUDIO CONTROL WEB APP
9
10
2
1
17
11
16
12
13
15
14
17
MOTU PRO AUDIO CONTROL WEB APP
6
7
8
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29
3
10
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12
18
MOTU PRO AUDIO CONTROL WEB APP
2
3
7
15
14
10
11
13
12
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MOTU PRO AUDIO CONTROL WEB APP
11
10
5
6
20
MOTU PRO AUDIO CONTROL WEB APP
10
3
Group busses can be used to create a mix subgroup, which is a set of inputs you wish to
control together as a group. Groups differ from
aux busses in that they have aux sends, a reverb
send, as well as a main mix send. In addition,
group busses are equipped with the Leveler.
The Reverb bus is a special group bus that
provides a reverb processor. If you disable the
reverb, the reverb bus functions as a (fourth)
regular group bus.
8
6
6. The Reverb processor. For complete information, see Reverb on page 58.
7. Main Mix sends.
8. Master faders for the Group and Reverb
busses.
9. Mute and Solo.
21
MOTU PRO AUDIO CONTROL WEB APP
22
MOTU PRO AUDIO CONTROL WEB APP
CHAPTER 1
Input
Output
10
Headphone output
1 x stereo
Total
18
22
Universal connectivity
The UltraLite-mk4 can connect to a computer with
high-speed USB 2.0, which is compatible with USB
3.0. It is USB audio class-compliant, which means
that it is iPad compatible (with a camera
connection kit) and does not require driver
installation for USB connection to a computer.
On-board DSP with mixing and effects
The UltraLite-mk4 is equipped with a powerful
DSP engine that drives both an extensive routing
matrix and a 48-input digital mixer with 12 stereo
busses and effects. The mixer offers familiar
operation modeled after large format mixing
consoles.
32-bit floating point processing
All of the mixing and effects processing in the DSP
engine is handled with 32-bit floating point
calculations, to maintain and deliver virtually
unlimited headroom and the utmost in sound
quality.
Modeled vintage effects processing
Effects include classic reverb, compression
modeled after the legendary Teletronix LA-2A
compressor, and 4-band EQ modeled after British
analog console EQs.
Matrix routing and multing
The UltraLite-mk4 provides completely flexible
matrix-style audio routing and multing. You can
route any analog or digital input or computer
channel to any other output or the computer. You
can also mult any single input to unlimited
multiple output destinations.
23
Headphone output
The UltraLite-mk4 front panel provides an
independent headphone jack with separate volume
control. You can program the phones to mirror
another set of outputs or act as its own
independent output.
Precision Digital Trim
Analog inputs are equipped with digitally
controlled analog trims, adjustable in 1 dB
increments. Analog outputs offer 32-bit trim in the
DAC, also adjustable in 1 dB increments. You can
save your trim configurations as a preset for instant
recall.
Rack mount or desktop operation
The UltraLite-mk4 is housed in a sturdy, metalalloy half-rack enclosure. Rack mounting brackets
are included for mounting side by side with any
other MOTU half-rack unit.
AudioDesk
AudioDesk is a full-featured audio workstation
software package for Mac and Windows that is
available as a free download for you as an
UltraLite-mk4 owner. Visit motu.com/download
to obtain your copy. AudioDesk provides multichannel waveform editing, automated virtual
mixing, graphic editing of ramp automation, realtime effects plug-ins with crossfades, support for
many third-party audio plug-ins, sample-accurate
editing and placement of audio, and more.
Comprehensive metering
The large backlit LCD displays all signal activity at
a glance with detailed metering for all I/O. You can
access many hardware settings directly from the
front panel.
24
ABOUT THE ULTRALITE-MK4
CHAPTER 2
PACKING LIST
One manual
SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
A 1 GHz Intel-based Mac or Pentium-based PC
(or compatible). Faster CPUs are recommended
for best performance.
Visit www.motu.com/register
OR
Fill out and mail the included product
registration card
25
26
PACKING LIST AND SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
CHAPTER 3
Software Installation
OVERVIEW
USB 2.0 class-compliant operation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Software installation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Audio drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
MOTU Discovery app . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
MOTU Pro Audio WebUI Setup for Windows . . . . . . . . .
MIDI I/O on Windows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
MIDI I/O setup on the Mac . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
AudioDesk workstation software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Working with host audio software. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
SOFTWARE INSTALLATION
27
27
27
28
28
29
29
30
30
AUDIO DRIVERS
The installer provides USB audio drivers for Mac
(CoreAudio) and Windows (ASIO and Wave).
Industry-leading I/O latency performance
On OS X and Windows, the MOTU Pro Audio
driver provides exceptionally low I/O latency
performance for USB operation. For example, with
a 32-sample host buffer size and a sample rate of
96 kHz, the UltraLite-mk4 produces round trip
latency (RTL) performance of 1.83 milliseconds
(ms) over USB on OS X and 1.84 ms on Windows.
RTL is the measurement of the time it takes audio
to pass from an analog input, through a highperformance DAW host such as Digital Performer,
to an analog output.
27
Figure 3-1: Choosing the MOTU Pro Audio ASIO driver in Cubase.
Figure 3-2: Access the Host Buffer Size and Host Safety Offset
settings in the web app Device tab for your MOTU interface.
28
SOFTWARE INSTALLATION
29
SOFTWARE INSTALLATION
30
SOFTWARE INSTALLATION
CHAPTER 4
Hardware Installation
OVERVIEW
USB audio interface setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
iOS audio interface setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
A typical UltraLite-mk4 setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Audio connections. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
MIDI connections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Syncing to SMPTE time code (LTC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
31
UltraLite-mk4
front panel
Headphones
Guitar
Synthesizer
Secondary
studio monitors
Primary
studio monitors
UltraLite-mk
4 back panel
Home theater
system
Tablet
Smartphone
8-channel
ADAT optical
Local Wi-Fi
Mac
or
PC
Figure 4-1: A typical UltraLite-mk4 setup.
32
HARDWARE INSTALLATION
AUDIO CONNECTIONS
Here are a few things to keep in mind as you are
making audio connections to your UltraLite-mk4
interface.
Mic/instrument inputs with preamps
Connect a microphone, guitar, instrument or other
analog input to the XLR/TRS combo jack with
either a standard mic cable or a balanced cable with
a quarter-inch plug.
33
HARDWARE INSTALLATION
UltraLite-mk4
S/PDIF
S/PDIF
S/PDIF device
UltraLite-mk4
Clock Source setting =
S/PDIF (when transferring from the
other device to the UltraLite-mk4)
UltraLite-mk4
Clock Source setting =
Internal (when transferring from the
UltraLite-mk4 to the other device)
Figure 4-2: The setup for synchronizing a S/PDIF device with the
UltraLite-mk4. Sync is achieved via the digital I/O connection itself. In
this case, you have to choose S/PDIF as the UltraLite-mk4s clock
source when recording from the other device.
34
HARDWARE INSTALLATION
MIDI CONNECTIONS
The UltraLite-mk4 provides MIDI I/O to the
computer over USB. Connect your MIDI devices
MIDI IN jack to the UltraLite-mk4s MIDI OUT
jack (Connection A below). Conversely, connect
the MIDI devices MIDI OUT jack to the
UltraLite-mk4s MIDI IN jack (Connection B).
MIDI
cables
MIDI
OUT
MIDI Device
MIDI
IN
MIDI
THRU
UltraLite-mk4
rear panel
MIDI
OUT
UltraLite-mk4
rear panel
MIDI
IN
MIDI
cable
MIDI IN
Additional device
Connection A
MIDI MIDI
IN OUT
Connection B
MIDI Device
Figure 4-3: Connecting a MIDI device to the UltraLite-mk4.
35
HARDWARE INSTALLATION
36
HARDWARE INSTALLATION
Part 2
Using the
UltraLite-mk4
CHAPTER 5
Presets
OVERVIEW
AUDIO INTERFACE
Preset menu
The preset menu (item #7 on page 12) contains a
number of presets specifically designed for
common use cases. By loading the corresponding
preset, the UltraLite-mk4s routing tab and mixer
will be reconfigured accordingly. You can visit the
routing and Mixing tabs to inspect settings and
adjust them as needed.
Audio interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Interface + mixer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Live recording with monitor mixing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Optical converter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Optical converter with mixing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
39
40
40
40
41
39
INTERFACE + MIXER
OPTICAL CONVERTER
Main
Mix
Aux
Mix 1
Other interface
Aux
Mix 2
Optical cable
UltraLite-mk4
Analog outputs
40
PRESETS
41
PRESETS
42
PRESETS
CHAPTER 6
OVERVIEW
PUSH-BUTTON KNOBS
The front-panel knobs (Figure 6-2) are pushbutton digital rotary encoders. Push the knob for
the function labeled in blue.
Level meters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Push-button Knobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Power. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Channel focus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Main volume. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Menu Navigation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Device menu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Settings menu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Presets menu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Version menu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Clock. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
43
43
43
43
43
43
44
44
44
44
44
Figure 6-2: Push the knob to activate the functions labeled in blue.
POWER
Push and hold the power knob (Figure 6-2) to
switch the unit on or off. The LCD provides
feedback as you hold to power down.
CHANNEL FOCUS
LEVEL METERS
In its default state when the unit is first powered on,
the LCD displays level meter activity for all analog
audio inputs and outputs (Figure 6-1).
Clock section
MAIN VOLUME
Push the PHONES volume knob (MAIN VOL) to
toggle volume control between the phones and
main outs. The LCD provides visual feedback.
Level meters for
analog I/O
Figure 6-1: Analog metering and activity indicators for MIDI and
optical I/O.
MENU NAVIGATION
Push SELECT to access the main menu, which
provides settings and status information.
Main Menu
Turn the SELECT knob to scroll through the menu
settings.
43
CLOCK
The Clock section of the LCD (Figure 6-1 on
page 43) displays the sample rate at which the unit
is currently operating, and the current Clock Mode
setting (item #13 in the Devices tab on page 12).
The Clock Mode setting can also be found (and
changed) in the Settings Menu.
Device menu
The Device menu provides information about the
device, such as its name and connection mode.
Settings menu
The Settings menu provides access to basic
hardware settings, such as Clock Mode, Sample
Rate, and so on.
Setting
What it does
Clock Mode
Sample Rate
Optical
MIDI Thru
LCD Contrast
Clear Password
Factory Defaults
Presets menu
The Presets menu lets you recall settings that have
been saved as a device preset. Use the web app to
create and save presets (item #7 in the Device tab
on page 12).
Version menu
The Version menu displays firmware version info.
44
THE FRONT PANEL LCD
CHAPTER 7
OVERVIEW
45
45
46
46
49
51
51
PREPARATION
Install your host audio software first if you havent
already done so, and complete these chapters
before proceeding:
Digital Performer
and AudioDesk
Logic Pro
Garage Band
Cubase and
Nuendo
Live
Reason
Reaper
Figure 7-1: Choosing the MOTU Pro Audio ASIO driver in Cubase.
46
WORKING WITH HOST AUDIO SOFTWARE
47
WORKING WITH HOST AUDIO SOFTWARE
Monitoring latency
48
WORKING WITH HOST AUDIO SOFTWARE
Transport responsiveness
Buffer size also impacts how quickly your audio
software will respond when you begin playback,
although not by amounts that are very noticeable.
Lowering the buffer size will make your software
respond faster; raising the buffer size will make it a
little bit slower.
Figure 7-5: When adjusting the buffer size to reduce monitoring
latency, watch the processor meter in Digital Performer or
AudioDesks Performance Monitor. If you hear distortion, or if the
Performance meter is peaking, try raising the buffer size.
Figure 7-6: An example of routing computer channels (from host audio software) to the analog outputs on a UltraLite-mk4, plus the S/PDIF
digital output. Computer channels 1-2 are being split to two pairs of outputs: Phones L-R and Main L-R. The ADAT bank is not being used.
49
WORKING WITH HOST AUDIO SOFTWARE
Figure 7-7: An example of routing all eighteen physical inputs on the UltraLite-mk4 to computer channels (for host audio software).
50
WORKING WITH HOST AUDIO SOFTWARE
LTC-TO-MTC CONVERSION
When connected to a Mac, your MOTU interface
can convert SMPTE time code (LTC) to MIDI
Time Code (MTC), allowing any MTC-compatible
host audio software to resolve to MTC.
LTC-to-MTC conversion can be done even when
the Clock Mode setting for the MOTU interface is
set to Internal (or any other setting). Note that the
Clock Mode setting does NOT have to be set to
LTC. In other words, the interface can convert LTC
to MTC even when it is not resolving its audio
engine to the incoming time code. This allows your
DAW host software to resolve to time code with fast
lockup response.
To set up LTC-to-MTC conversion:
6 Set the interface Clock Mode to Internal (or any
other desired setting).
7 Set the other LTC settings as needed, as
discussed in Syncing to SMPTE time code (LTC)
on page 35, including the Computer Channel for
LTC-to-MTC Conversion setting.
8 If you would like MIDI Time Code to continue
to be generated, even after LTC stops being
received, check Enable Jam Sync (Figure 4-5 on
page 36). Otherwise, leave it unchecked.
www.motu.com/avb
51
WORKING WITH HOST AUDIO SOFTWARE
Sync settings
Digital Performer
and AudioDesk
Pro Tools
Logic
Live
Cubase
52
WORKING WITH HOST AUDIO SOFTWARE
CHAPTER 8
Mixer Effects
OVERVIEW
Leveler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Mixing tab . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Aux Mixing tab . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Mixer input channel strips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Main Mix and Monitor channel strips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Aux bus channel strips. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Group and Reverb channel strips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Reverb . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
16
17
18
19
20
21
Compressor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
53
GATE
All input channel strips provide a Gate module.
Enabling EQ
Each band has an enable/disable button
(Figure 8-3), allowing you to enable as few or as
many bands as needed for the channel strip.
Enable/disable
FOUR-BAND PARAMETRIC EQ
All mixer channel strips, (except for the Monitor
bus), provide modeled, four-band parametric EQ.
Vintage EQ
Inspired by legendary British large console EQs,
the EQ section (Figure 8-3) models the sound of the
most sought-after classic equalizers. Four bands of
center frequency parametric EQ filtering are
provided, each with a bandwidth control. The
High and Low bands include a shelf filtering
option. With 32-bit floating point precision, the
vintage EQ has been carefully crafted and
meticulously engineered to produce musical
results in a wide variety of applications.
EQ filter controls
The EQ filters have three controls:
Control
unit
range
Gain
dB
-20.00 to +20.00
Frequency
Hertz
20 to 20,000
Bandwidth
Octaves
0.01 to 3.00
54
MIXER EFFECTS
COMPRESSOR
All mixer input channel strips provide a
compressor module.
Frequency/Gain
handle
Q (bandwidth)
handle
Peak/shelf
switch
EQ filter
Enable/disable
55
MIXER EFFECTS
RMS mode
By default, the compressor operates in Peak mode,
which uses signal peaks to determine the input
level. In RMS mode, the compressor measures the
input signals loudness, using the root-meansquare computational method. When RMS is
disabled, RMS mode will let brief peaks through
because the detector sidechain is only looking at
the average signal level. By contrast, peak mode
will catch those brief peaks. Peak mode is generally
used for drums, percussion and other source
material with strong transients, while RMS mode is
mostly used for everything else.
The level meter shows either the peak level or the
RMS level, depending on the mode.
Compressor graph
The Compressor graph below the Compressor
section (Figure 8-5) provides a thumbnail visual
indication of the current compressor settings for
the input channel. It is for visual reference only and
cannot be edited directly. However, you can click it
to open the full-size Compressor graph in a
separate window (Figure 8-6), which provides
graphic editing of the Ratio and Threshold
controls.
Ratio handle
Threshold
handle
Figure 8-6: The full-size Compressor graph.
56
MIXER EFFECTS
LEVELER
The Leveler (Figure 8-7) provides an accurate
model of the legendary Teletronix LA-2A
optical compressor, known for its unique and
highly sought-after Automatic Gain Control
(AGC) characteristics.
57
MIXER EFFECTS
REVERB
Use the enable/disable button (Figure 8-8) to turn
the reverb processor on or off. Since reverb uses
considerable DSP resources, it is best to leave it off
when you are not using it.
58
MIXER EFFECTS
DSP USAGE
The DSP Usage meter (item #30 on page 18) shows
how much of the available DSP processing power is
currently being used by the mixer for the mix and
for effects processing. If there arent enough DSP
resources for all effects to be enabled on a channel,
effects are disabled for that channel and all
subsequent channels.
59
MIXER EFFECTS
60
MIXER EFFECTS
CHAPTER 9
61
61
62
62
63
65
70
73
INSTALLATION
MOTU Audio Tools is a standard software
application installed on your Mac or PC when you
run the MOTU Pro Audio installer or setup app. It
can be found in the Applications folder (Mac) or
Start menu under MOTU (Windows).
DEVICE MENU
If you are working with more than one MOTU
audio interface, the Device menu (Figure 9-1)
displays all interfaces that are currently connected
to your host computer. Choose the device you wish
to work with.
Figure 9-1: The MOTU Audio Tools window with the FFT and Spectrogram Analysis .
61
ANALYSIS MENU
Choose the desired form of audio analysis from the
Analysis menu (Figure 9-1). For details on each
analysis pane, see the following sections of this
guide.
LEFT/RIGHT INPUT
Choose the desired channel(s) you wish to scope
from the Left Input and Right Input menus
(Figure 9-1). These menus display the To Computer
channels configured in the MOTU Pro Audio
Control web app. The number of channels shown is
controlled by the From device to computer setting in
the Device tab. For example, if 18 channels are
specified, youll see 18 channels in the Left/Right
Figure 9-2: An example of routing audio sources (listed across the top of the routing grid) on an UltraLite-mk4
interface to computer channels (for routing to the MOTU Audio Tools application).
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
Pause button
Blue
Green
Yellow
Orange
Full scale
Red
View menu
Display options
View menu
This menu provides various options for displaying
the two input channels.
View menu setting
What it does
Left
Right
Split Screen H
Split Screen V
Shared
Max
The FFT and spectrogram shows the maximum level of either the left or right channel.
Subtract L - R
View controls
You can show and hide the FFT display and
spectrogram as desired using the View controls
(Figure 9-6).
Y-axis labels
for FFT display
FFT curve
View
controls
Horizontal
controls
Vertical
controls
Spectrogram
controls
Grow handle
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
Axes display
The Axes control (Figure 9-6) sets the opacity of
the grid displayed in the graph, from 100% (fully
visible) down to 0% (fully hidden).
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
OSCILLOSCOPE
View menu
The View menu (Figure 9-11) lets you choose how
to display the audio channel(s) being displayed.
Left
Right
Split screen
Shared
Add
Subtract L-R
Display options
The Axes control (Figure 9-11) sets the opacity of
the grid displayed in the graph, from 100% (fully
visible) down to 0% (fully hidden). The Show Ruler
option toggles the measurement items (see
Measurement information on page 68).
Pause button
View menu
Measurement
info
Measurement
range boundary
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
Waveform Recognition
The Waveform Recognition option (Figure 9-10)
searches through new audio data looking for a
waveform which most resembles that which was
previously displayed. The region where this takes
place is a small window around the line marking
time equals zero, denoted by the extra vertical
graph lines surrounding it. There are two kinds of
waveform recognition available: Type I and
Type II.
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
Trigger indicator
Trigger menu
Criteria check boxes
Criteria
The criteria checkboxes (Figure 9-13) determine
the conditions that the trigger is looking for and
where it will look for them.
The Left checkbox causes the condition to be
looked for in the left channel of the signal; likewise,
the Right checkbox looks for the condition in the
right channel. One or both of these can be enabled
simultaneously. If neither is enabled, the criteria
will not be found because the trigger is not looking
at any audio signal.
The Pos and Neg checkboxes determine the slope of
the event. When the Pos checkbox is enabled, the
trigger will look for an event where amplitude is
increasing; likewise, enabling the Neg checkbox
tells the trigger to look for an event where
amplitude is decreasing. One or both of these can
be enabled simultaneously. If neither is enabled,
the criteria will not be found because the trigger is
not looking for any particular kind of event.
The Level setting defines the amplitude threshold
that the trigger is looking for. The Level is indicated
on the graph by a blue horizontal line (or two blue
horizontal lines, if Magnitude is enabled). Events
which cross this threshold using the enabled
slope(s) in the enabled channel(s) will activate the
trigger. The response of the trigger is set by the
Trigger mode (see Trigger modes, below).
Holdoff
Holdoff defines a time interval during which the
oscilloscope does not trigger. The most recent trace
will be displayed during that period. When the
period is over, the trigger is re-armed, i.e. it will
begin looking for the criteria again.
Click and drag this value up or down to set it, or
double-click to return to the default value.
Trigger modes
The Trigger menu (Figure 9-13) provides four
modes:
Trigger mode What it does
None
Auto
The display is always updating, but when the condition is met, the trigger event will be displayed
centered around the line marking time equals
zero.
Normal
Single
Sweep
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
Trigger indicator
The Trigger indicator (Figure 9-13) displays the
state of the trigger, and also provides a way to
manually interact with it. The Trigger indicator
always displays one of three colors:
Color
Status
Green
When the current Trigger criteria has been met (including when the Trigger mode is None).
Yellow
Red
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
Clip detection
You can use the Oscilloscope to detect clipping in a
digital audio signal. To do so, enable all criteria
(Figure 9-13), choose Single Sweep from the trigger
menu (Figure 9-13), set the level to 0.999 and click
the trigger indicator (Figure 9-13) to arm it
(yellow). As soon as the signal clips, the trigger
indicator will turn red, and the display will show
the offending clip at the line marking time equals
zero.
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
X-Y PLOT
The X-Y Plot window (Figure 9-14) graphs the
amplitude of a stereo audio signal on a twodimensional grid.
For each unit of time (i.e., each sample), the
amplitude of the left channel is displayed on the
x-axis and the amplitude of the right channel is
displayed on the y-axis. A thick white vertical line
marks where left channel amplitude equals zero; a
thick white horizontal line marks where right
channel amplitude equals zero (Figure 9-14).
There are also thick white diagonal lines for y = x
and
y = -x.
Metering
Level meters are displayed above and to the right of
the graph for the left (green) and right (red)
channels, respectively. An additional Correlation
meter (blue) is displayed on the right. This meter
displays the correlation between the two channels.
Mathematical
relationship
Perfect correlation
+1
Diagonal line
going from
lower left to
upper right:
y=x
Zero correlation
No discernible pattern
None
Perfectly out of
phase
-1
Diagonal line
going from
upper left to
lower right:
y = -x
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
View controls
The View controls (Figure 9-15) provide several
options for the X-Y Plot display.
Pause button
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
Length
Length (Figure 9-18) sets the number of recent
samples to show on the plot. For example, when
Length is set to 10,000, the 10,000 most recent
samples are shown.
Decay
The brightness (in Grayscale mode) or hue (in
Color mode) of each sample on the plot is
determined by a linear scale, with the most recent
sample displayed at the maximum value and the
oldest sample displayed at the minimum value.
Decay (Figure 9-18 on page 72) determines the
brightness or hue of the minimum value. When
Decay is zero, the oldest sample is black. When
Decay is +1.000, the oldest sample is fully opaque
(in Grayscale mode) or red (in Color mode).
Warp
Warp (Figure 9-18) determines the position of data
points after they are first drawn. When warp is
zero, data points remain in the same position.
In polarity
What it indicates
Left and right channels are predominantly in polarity (the stereo field is relatively narrow)
Out of polarity
No polarity
Figure 9-19: Checking polarity in a stereo signal with the X-Y Plot.
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
PHASE ANALYSIS
The Phase Analysis window (Figure 9-20) graphs
frequency versus phase difference versus
amplitude of a stereo signal on either rectangular
or polar coordinates.
View controls
The View controls (Figure 9-21) provide several
options for the Phase Analysis display.
Pause button
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
Line/Scatter
Choose either Line or Scatter from the menu in the
View section (Figure 9-21) to plot each data point
as either a single pixel or as a continuous line that
connects each frequency data point to the next, as
shown below in Figure 9-16.
Rectangular/Polar
Choose either Rectangular or Polar from the menu
in the View section (Figure 9-21) to control how
audio is plotted on the Phase Analysis grid.
Rectangular plots the audio on an X-Y grid, with
frequency along the vertical axis and phase
difference on the horizontal axis. Polar plots the
data on a polar grid with zero Hertz at its center.
The length of the radius (distance from the center)
represents frequency, and the angle (theta)
measured from the +y (vertical) axis represents the
phase difference in degrees.
Figure 9-22: The same Phase Analysis displayed in Line versus Scatter
mode.
Color/Grayscale
In Color mode (Figure 9-21) signal amplitude is
indicated by color as follows: red is loud and blue is
soft. In grayscale mode, white is loud and gray is
soft.
Linear/Logarithmic
Choose either Linear or Logarithmic from the
menu in the View section (Figure 9-21) to change
the scale of the frequency axis. In rectangular
coordinates, the vertical axis represents frequency,
and in polar coordinates, the radius from the
center is frequency. With a linear scale, frequencies
are spaced evenly; in a logarithmic scale, each
octave is spaced evenly (frequencies are scaled
logarithmically within each octave).
Linear is better for viewing high frequencies;
logarithmic is better for viewing low frequencies.
Axes
The Axes control (Figure 9-21) sets the opacity of
the grid displayed in the graph, from 100% (fully
visible) down to 0% (fully hidden).
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
Floor
Floor (Figure 9-26) determines the amplitude
threshold for the display. When the amplitude of
both channels drops below this threshold, the
signal is not shown.
Summing to mono
The Phase Analysis window is ideal for checking
stereo audio that needs to be summed to mono.
The Phase Analysis lets you see what frequencies
will be canceled out when summed.
Figure 9-28: A stereo mix with phase issues.
Perfectly in phase
One-sample delay
Twenty-sample delay
Inverted
Polar view
Rectangular
view
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MOTU AUDIO TOOLS
Part 3
Appendices
APPENDIX A
Troubleshooting
CUSTOMER SUPPORT
We are happy to provide complimentary customer
support to our registered users. If you havent
already done so, please take a moment to register
online at MOTU.com, or fill out and mail the
included registration card. Doing so entitles you to
technical support and notices about new products
and software updates.
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
If you are unable, with your dealers help, to solve
problems you encounter with your MOTU device,
you may contact our technical support department
in one of the following ways:
Tech support hotline: (617) 576-3066 (Monday
through Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. EST)
80
APPENDIX A: TROUBLESHOOTING
APPENDIX B
Audio Specifications
Line Out
Connector Type
Output Impedance
100 ohm
Per leg
Dynamic Range
117 dB
A-weighted
THD+N
-101 dB
Frequency Response
Ref. 1 kHz
+20 dBu
Trim Range
24 dB
Connector Type
Combo-style, TS female
Unbalanced
Impedance
1 megohm
Guitar In
Dynamic Range
101 dB
A-weighted
THD+N
-94 dB
-1 dBFS, Unweighted
Frequency Response
+0.05, -0.1 dB
Ref. 1 kHz
Max Level In
0.615v to 2.45v
Trim Range
24 dB
Connector Type
Specification
Line In
Impedance Load
10 k ohm
Dynamic Range
110 dB
A-weighted
THD+N
-102 dB
-1 dBFS, Unweighted
Frequency Response
Ref. 1 kHz
Max Level In
+24 dBu
Trim Range
118 dB
Connector Type
Pin 2 hot
Impedance Load
Pad
MIC In
Phantom Power
EIN
Rs = 150 ohm
Dynamic Range
112 dB
A-weighted
THD+N
-104 dB
Frequency Response
Ref. 1 kHz
Max Level In
+24 dBu
With pad
Trim Range
56 dB
81
Phones
Connector Type
Dynamic Range
112 dB
A-Weighted
THD+N
-94 dB
Unweighted
Frequency Response
Ref. 1 kHz
Drive
Max. 80 mw
16/32/55 ohms
Trim Range
128 dB
S/PDIF
Connector Type
RCA
Termination
75 ohm I/O
Lock Range
1x, 2x
0.2 Vpp/1Vpp
With termination
Output Drive
DC coupled
THD+N In (SRC)
-122 dB
Specification
IEC-958/60968-3
Power Supply
Connector Type
Configuration
Power Input
82
APPENDIX B: AUDIO SPECIFICATIONS
APPENDIX C
Mixer Schematics
83
84
APPENDIX C: MIXER SCHEMATICS
GROUP BUS
85
APPENDIX C: MIXER SCHEMATICS
MONITOR BUS
86
APPENDIX C: MIXER SCHEMATICS
APPENDIX D
Updating Firmware
Figure D-1: The firmware update banner appears automatically at the top of the
Device tab when your web host has internet access and MOTU posts an update.
87
Figure D-2: The currently installed firmware version is displayed at the bottom of the Device tab.
88
APPENDIX D: UPDATING FIRMWARE
APPENDIX E
Auto-on Mode
89
90
APPENDIX E: AUTO-ON MODE
Index
24-bit
optical 10
2x SMUX mode 13, 34
A
Ableton Live 45, 46
ADAT optical 10
connecting 34
settings 13
Analog inputs/outputs 33
making connections to 33
Apple
Garage Band 46
Logic Pro 46
ASIO driver 46
ASIO monitoring 47
Attack
Compressor 54, 56
Audio
MIDI Setup utility 29
Audio interface preset 7, 39
Audio Tools 61
AudioDesk 24, 30, 45, 46
Aux Mix Target 17
Aux Mixing tab 17
Avid
Pro Tools 46
B
Balanced analog 33
Buffer Size 12, 28
C
Check for Updates 14
Chrome 11
Class compliance 27
Clear Password 14, 44
Clock Mode 12
Clock section (LCD) 44
Cockos Reaper 46
Compressor effect 16, 55
Computer Channel for LTC-to-MTC
Conversion 14
Computer Setup 14
Computer Volume Controls option 14
Controller
connecting 35
Converter mode
setup/example 40
Converters 10
Core Audio driver 46
Core MIDI
Audio MIDI Setup 29
benefits 29
Correlation Meter 73
Cubase 45, 46
clock source 45
sample rate 45
CueMix FX
Devices menu 61
installation 61
Customer
support 80
D
DAT
connecting 34
Device tab 12, 13
Devices menu 61
Digital converter (see Optical converter)
Digital Performer 45, 46
Direct hardware playthrough 47
Direct ASIO monitoring 47
Direct hardware playthrough 47
Discovery app 7, 28
Driver installation 7, 11
Drivers
installing USB drivers 27
DSP
effects 53
meter 59
resources 59
DSP Usage 18, 59
E
Effects 53
Enable Jam Sync 14
EQ 54
enabling 54
filter types 54
frequency 54
gain 54
Q 54
F
Factory Defaults 44
Firefox 11
Firmware
version 14
Firmware updates 12
Follow Solo 16, 19
Four-band EQ 54
Frequency
EQ 54
From Computer 15
Front panel 43
menu navigation 43
metering 43
G
Gain
EQ 54
reduction 56
reduction (Leveler) 58
Garage Band 45, 46
clock source 45
sample rate 45
Gate effect 16, 54
GR (gain reduction) 56
H
Headphone outputs 9
Headphones
connecting 32
High pass filter 53
Host
Buffer Size 12, 28
JJam Sync 14
Jam sync 36
K
Keyboard controller
connecting 35
L
Latency 12, 27, 28, 46, 48
LCD
contrast 44
menu 43
Leveler 16, 57
Lightpipe 34
Limit button 58
Live 46
Live recording with monitor mixing preset
7, 40
Lock button 15
Logic Pro 46
Logic Pro/Express 45
clock source 45
sample rate 45
LTC
to MTC conversion 51
LTC Input Source 14
LTC Setup 35
M
Mac OS X 45
input and output names 50
system requirements 25
Main outs
front panel volume control 33
making connections to 33
Makeup gain 58
Mic inputs
preamp gain/pad/48V 9
Mic/guitar inputs 33
Mic/instrument inputs 33
MIDI
connections 35
jacks 10
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I N D EX
overview 24
software setup 29
thru 35
Windows driver installation 29
MIDI Thru 44
MIDI Time Code 14, 51
Mixer
accessing 16
aux bus 20
connecting 32
effects 53
group bus 21
input channel strip 18
main mix channel strip 19
Monitor channel strip 19
overview 16
Reverb bus 21
schematics 83
Setup 13
stand-alone operation 53
Mixing tab 16
Monitoring
thru main outs 33
MOTU
Audio Tools 61
AudioDesk 46
Control web app 11
Digital Performer 46
Discovery app 7, 11, 28
Pro Audio
WebUI Setup 11
Pro Audio ASIO driver 46
Pro Audio Control web app 7, 11-21
Aux Mixing tab 17
Device tab 12, 13
Mixing tab 16
Routing tab 15
Pro Audio Installer 7, 11
MOTU Pro Audio WebUI Setup 28
MTC 14, 51
N
Nuendo 45, 46
clock source 45
sample rate 45
O
Optical
connectors 10, 34
S/PDIF 34
Optical Converter preset 7, 40
Optical converter preset
setup/example 40
Optical converter with mixing preset 41
Optical setup 13
Optimization 48
OS X audio software
clock source 45
sample rate 45
Oscilloscope 65
Output banks 13
Output settings 12
Outputs
optical 10
S/PDIF (TOSLink) 10
P
Packing list 25
Pad 33
Password protection 14
Patch thru
latency 48
Performance 48
Phantom power 33
Phase Analysis 73
Phone outputs 9
Power supply
jack 10
Power switch 43
PRE switch 16
PreDelay 58
Prefader button 17
Presets 7, 12
Mixer tab 16
overview 39
Routing tab 15
Pro Audio Control web app 7, 11-21
Aux Mixing tab 17
Device tab 12, 13
Mixing tab 16
Routing tab 15
Pro Tools 45, 46
Processing 53
Q
Q 54
Quick Setup window 7
QuickStart Guide 7
R
Ratio
Compressor 55
Reaper 45, 46
Reason 45
Propellerhead Reason 46
Reboot 14
Registration 25
Release
Compressor 54, 56
Restore Factory Presets 14
Reverb 58-59
design section 58
enabling/disabling 58
predelay 58
routing to/from 58
time 58, 59
width 59
RMS mode 56
Routing tab 15
S
S/PDIF 24
connection 34
optical 10
RCA 10
sync 34
S/PDIF (optical) 34
Safari 11
Sample rate 12
Samplers
connecting 32
SC button 19
Schematics 83
Set password 14
SMPTE sync 35
SMPTE time code 14
SMUX 34
Software
installation 27
Software installer 7, 11
Solo bus 19
Solo Clear button 18
SONAR 45
Sound module
connecting 35
Soundtrack Pro
clock source 45
sample rate 45
Stage monitors
connecting 32
Stand-alone mixer preset 7
Stand-alone operation 43
Standard (optical setting) 34
Steinberg
Cubase 46
Nuendo 46
Stop Jam Sync 14
Studio setup (example) 32
Synchronization
SMPTE time code 35
Synths
connecting 32
System Information 14
System requirements
minimum 25
recommended computer 25
T
Technical support 80
Threshold
Compressor 55
Time code 14
Time code sync 35
To Computer 15
TOSLink 10, 13, 34
Trim 33
Troubleshooting 79
TRS analog inputs/outputs 33
TRS connectors 33
Type II (Legacy) optical setting 34
U
UltraLite-mk4
setup example 32
specifications 81
summary of features 23
Unbalanced analog 33
Update From File 14
USB
class compliance 27
92
I N D E X
installing drivers 27
V
View Personal Mix 17
W
Wave driver 46
WDM (Wave) Driver 28
Width
reverb 59
Windows
shortcut 28
system requirements 25
WDM (Wave) driver 28
X
X-Y Plot 70
93
I N D EX
94
I N D E X