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VC2 - Joemeek

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1. Do not let the VU needle hit the end stop too hard or overload may possibly happen The meter electronics has been adjusted so that it is normal for the needle to move in the red area OVERLOAD MARGIN AND THE VU METER For steady tones the 0 on the VU meter corresponds to approximately OdBu Where OdBu is 0 775v RMS on the line output with the output control set at 0 This setting of 0 is to allow for the considerable under read that occurs with all VU meters with music signals It is normal for the peaks of signals to go to 10dBu while the VU meter reads only 0 In practice when the VU meter is peaking at or just above 0 the music signal will be well within normal limits and will have a significant overload margin VC2 4 Even with the needle hitting the end stop the signal will not be distorted although the overload margin will be reduced The VU meter is connected before the output gain control THE JOEMEEK Tube Channel COMPRESSOR And now for the part of the JOEMEEK Tube Channel that gives it character THE COMPRESSOR The compressor is a photoelectric device where the sound triggers light emitting diodes which in turn control the resistance of a photo sensitive resistor This form of compression used to be common in the 60 s and 70 s but has been superseded by so called improved voltage controlled amplifiers The advantages of the older system are that distortion is virtually nil noise is extremely low whil
2. the performance is startlingly good The JOEMEEK Tube Channel is designed for the best capacitor microphones it is particularly good with the Neumann range the AKG C3000 and C414 Microtech Gefell and Audio Technica Dynamic or ribbon microphones should be used with the phantom power turned off then full advantage can be taken of the extreme low noise performance of this amplifier An unusual function switch is included on the rear panel for historic microphones this is an impedance conversion switch to optimise noise performance for elderly ribbon and moving coil microphones which were designed to operate at 50 ohms Pressing in the hidden switch the impedance of the input is reduced to give an improved transformer ratio for these microphones VOLUME In normal use the JOEMEEK Tube Channel will work with any microphone and in any audio environment However some capacitor microphones can produce enormous output voltages when placed close to a loud sound source To eliminate any possibility of overload under these conditions a 20dB pad switch is fitted NOISE The combination of a good specially wound microphone transformer and 1996 spec amplifiers makes the noise lower than other microphone amplifiers VC2 2 In practice the only noise audible is the noise from the microphone itself except the characteristic tube noise in the line amplifiers PHASE SHIFT and QUALITY It s Fletcher Company theory that big
3. compression while COMP 1 can give pumping effects It is advisable to keep compression to a minimum during recording The most effective way of using compression is during the mixdown process VC2 7 ATTACK sets the time that the compressor takes to act At minimum a fastest it is possible to make it overshoot on some percussive programme material This means that the compression electronics are driven hard before the gain has been controlled by the light cells The cells catch up and overcompress momentarily giving a tiny dip immediately following the start of ee the note This is best demonstrated when recording drums With Slope set to COMP 1 and attack and release to fastest Used sparingly this can contribute to musical drive Slower attacks are used where the compression needs to be less obvious RELEASE sets the time during which the path gain returns to normal after compression Generally the longer the time the less obvious is the compression AMOUNTS OF COMPRESSION There can be no rule as to the correct amount of compression for any particular programme material Compression particularly the JOEMEEK compressor is a creative effect for the producer In rock music it is possible to use considerable amounts of compression 10dB or more and still for the effect to be slight in classical recording conventional compression is frowned upon but the JOEMEEK compressor can be used to great effect if handled gentl
4. the resulting harmonics back with the signal It adds high frequency sparkle making singing voices sound more present and exciting without some of the other hissy effects you get from simply turning up the HF equaliser It is the supreme suck it and see device Used properly it can create beautiful sounds Overused it can be horrible USING THE ENHANCER Once a signal is going through the Tube Channel press the ENHANCE push button which changes the en LED from green to red turn up the DRIVE control until the Enhance LED just starts to change colour or brighten on peak sounds Turn up the ENHANCE control until the sharpening of the sound is obvious then adjust the Q control and the DRIVE control to get the required effect Like the Compress control the ENHANCE control just adds the enhancement so if it is turned to minimum there is no effect Once the effect is audible experiment with the three controls to get the desired sound the controls are very much interdependent and musically related DRIVE affects the depth and tone of the enhancement RESONANCE or Q affects the length of the high frequency harmonic after the syllable that created it CAUTION If in any doubt at all leave enhancement till the mixdown its easy to put on but impossible to take off VC2 10 NOISE IN THE ENHANCER de Under many normal conditions of use the enhancer has the effect of amplifying selected narrow frequency bands in th
5. Tube Channel JOEMEEK TUBE CHANNEL INSTRUCTIONS The JOEMEEK TUBE CHANNEL VC2 is a development of historic tried and tested circuits and designs from the 1960 s to the present day combined in a single outboard rack unit by acknowledged leaders in analogue technology THE JOEMEEK TUBE CHANNEL WHAT IT IS AND WHY The JOEMEEK Tube Channel is the result of continuing experimental and development work carried out over a 2 year period to incorporate the best of historic design and tube technology as an extension of the development of the other famous JOEMEEK products the Stereo Compressor the Studio Channel and the ProChannel It s best to think of the Tube Channel as four separate pieces of equipment 1 The Microphone amplifier 2 The Compressor 3 The Enhancer 4 The gain make up VC2 1 The microphone amplifier takes the audio signals from any microphone and amplifies them up to line level that is from a few millivolts up to a about a volt This function is not too difficult and the microphone amplifiers on normal V2 professional mixers do it quite well BUT they cut costs and corners The ae JOEMEEK Tube Channel has an uncompromising old fashioned approach it uses a transformer at the input and two separate amplification stages linked to provide lowest possible noise and distortion By using the finest components available for the purpose and with proven high overload amplifier design developed over many years
6. VC2 15 VC2 Worldwide distribution by JOEMEEK Distribution Quay House Quay Road Newton Abbot Devon TQ12 2BU ENGLAND Tel 44 1626 333948 Fax 44 1626 333157 email sales joemeek uk com www joemeek uk com 16
7. al interference and produces an accurate line level signal PHASE A push button is provided on the front panel to reverse the phase of all audio signals mic and line VC2 3 BALANCED AND UNBALANCED The JOEMEEK Tube Channel is designed to be used in the best larger studios where most if not all interconnections are balanced Balanced V2 operation means that the audio is carried on two wires working in opposite a phase Then should any interference appear on the line it will be effectively cancelled out Both of the main inputs Microphone and Line and the line output are accurately balanced to get best advantage from true balanced operation but unbalanced operation for line level signals will NOT degrade the performance unless very long cables are used above 50 metres OPERATING THE MICROPHONE AMPLIFIER Press in the MIC LINE switch in for MIC and out for LINE Turn the INPUT GAIN knob down to minimum then If you are using a capacitor microphone plug in the microphone then switch on the phantom power by pressing in the Phantom switch Do it in that order NOTE The phantom power supply takes several minutes to reach its working voltage Remember to switch on at least 5 minutes before using the microphone CAUTION When using phantom power DO NOT USE UNBALANCED MICROPHONES It will damage magnetise the input transformer Turn up the INPUT GAIN until sound registers on the VU meter VU switch in
8. anced 50 ohm 4dBu for OVU variable a Max output unbalanced approx 22dBu balanced 26dBu XLR Low level balanced 200 ohm 40dBu Insert Tip and Ring jack socket 400 ohm 10dBu output 22K ohm input COMPRESSOR Photoresistive servo operated with 2 stage tube amplifier Ratio 1 approx 5 to 1 ratio switch Ratio 2 approx 3 to 1 Attack time 1mS min 7mS max variable Release time 200mS min 3S max variable ENHANCER e Performance details not released POWER e Approx 15 Watts e IEC socket for power cable e Reversible fuse holder for 230VAC and 110VAC power input HOUSING e 21 rack mounting totally enclosed steel case e depth approx 350mm e weight 2 5Kgs WARRANTY In the unlikely case of a breakdown please return the unit in its original packing through the supplier The unit will be attended to immediately and returned to your supplier If any breakdown occurs excluding physical mistreatment within 12 months of purchase no charge will be made DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY This analogue audio processing equipment conforms to the standards and requirements of the European Economic Community The EC Harmonised standards that have been applied are a Electrical equipment safety Regulations 1994 S I 1994 3260 b Electromagnetic Compatibility Directive 89 336 EEC incorporating Sl 1992 2372 1998 Distribution by JOEMEEK Distribution Phone 44 0 1626 333948 Fax 44 0 1626 333157
9. d reputation for sounding nasty But not all audio distortion is unpleasant the tiny distortions produced by thermionic valves or tubes is basically second order distortion harmonically related to the audio signal and pleasant to listen to So what little distortion is produced by a well designed tube amplifier is good to listen to and actually enhances the quality of the sound although when it is measured on sophisticated test equipment it will actually show a higher harmonic distortion figure VC2 11 The tube make up amplifier in the JOEMEEK Tube Channel has been optimised to produce minimal noise and distortion but the remainder distortion in the system is second order and this is one of the reasons that the sound of the Tube Channel is warm and pleasant TUBE NOISE The characteristic sound of the noise produced by a tube amplifier is very unlike the noise in a solid state amplifier The frequency spectrum is different and this contributes psychoacoustically to the warm sound of the Tube Channel USING THE INS AND OUTS MICROPHONE The microphone input is an XLR connector The microphone used should be balanced 200 ohm impedance or 50 ohm impedance impedance select switch Connections are e Pin 1 is ground or screen e Pin 2 is positive phase or hot e Pin 3 is negative phase or ground for unbalanced To avoid impulsive clonks and the possibility of causing magnetising in the microphone input transformer
10. e amount of compression in use can be seen from the VU meter but also the flickering red LED is fitted to show the depth of compression this is particularly useful during a busy session STEREO LINKING On some units only a stereo link socket phono socket is fitted to the rear panel To link two units fit a screened single phono to phono cable between the two link sockets This will link the two compression sidechains BUT DOES NOT GUARANTEE ACCURATE GAIN REDUCTION between the two channels The reason for this is that the photoelectric compressor relies on the linearity of selected light dependent resistor cells which are never exactly the same It is likely that stereo matching of within 1dB can be achieved with any two units but this cannot be guaranteed When using the units as stereo pairs make sure that the settings on the two units are the same CONTROL EXPLANATIONS COMPRESSION simply adds gain to the compression sidechain and so increases compression In simple terms this changes the threshold of the compression although with this compressor the threshold is not clearly defined the compression starts very gradually and the compression ratio changes radically with programme content and amplitude For practical purposes winding up the compression control increases the amount of compression In use all controls are interrelated SLOPE This switch controls the ratio of compression In practice COMP 2 is very gentle
11. e overload margin is extremely good The disadvantages are that the design is more difficult to produce cheaply and according to those who judge equipment by specifications and not by listening the older design is less flexible in operation and more difficult to use Using 1990 s electronics for the control circuitry Ted Fletcher has recreated the compressed sound of the 60 s a sound that was unlikely ever to be heard again Totally unlike a modern compressor it can pull voices forward help with internal mix balance and add presence to the sound as well as controlling recording volume levels But its main and unique attribute is its ability to produce the characteristic 60 s compressed exciting sound without losing the transient sparkles that are such a feature of good digital recording THE COMPRESSOR TECHNICALLY To get the best use out of the compressor it is necessary to understand the basic physics and what it is designed to do A LIMITER is a device which stops the output of a signal path going above a predetermined level VC2 5 A COMPRESSOR is a device which reduces the dynamic range of programme material V2 WHAT IS A COMPRESSOR A perfect compressor is an amplifier where the input output ratio is constant So using a 2 1 compressor increasing the input by 2dB gives a corresponding 1dB increase in the output Early compressors which used variable mu thermionic tubes or photoelectric devices only approximated t
12. e upper mid range The VC2 danger is always to overuse the enhancer This has the effect that any noise ee sounds particularly scratchy The problem is that the existence of these frequencies is common in quality recording The effect can be reduced to almost nothing with careful use of the drive and enhance controls but it does take practice THE TUBE THE MAKE UP AMPLIFIER The photoelectric compressor attenuates reduces the volume of the audio signal This gain loss has to be made up in an amplifier Normally this amplifier is solid state and adds no noise or distortion of any sort In the JOEMEEK Tube Channel the amplifier used is a thermionic tube This old technology is used to produce a particular sort of warm sound that is a product of the way thermionic tubes work TUBE DISTORTION All amplifiers produce distortion of some sort Modern solid state circuits have effectively eliminated distortion down to such low levels that they are very difficult to detect However such distortions that are left are basically third order these are distortions that impose microscopic additions to the sound in an unmusical way that is the distortion products are not musically related to the original audio signal Unfortunately for electronics designers the human ear is extremely good at noticing these very low levels of distortion and recognising them as unpleasant This is why all early transistor radios had such a ba
13. lternative AC voltage VC2 13 TECHNICAL SPECIFICATION MICROPHONE INPUT XLR Input 3Kohm and 800 ohm switchable to suit 200 ohm and 50 ohm microphones Transformer balanced and floating Switchable 48V phantom power Input level from 80dB to OdB 20dB pad switch Push button 200 50 ohm source switch on rear panel Push button MIC LINE switch Push button 20dB pad switch Push button 48V phantom supply switch with LED indicator LINE INPUTS e XLR 10K impedance floating balanced e Mix input unbalanced 10K impedance OVERLOAD MARGIN e 30dB on Mic and Line inputs in normal operation GAIN e Line in 6dB to 24dB e Mic in 15dBto 68dB e Insert gain 0dB e Mix in gain 0dB NOISE e Line in 80dB below operating level e Mic in 125 5dB below input at 50dB gain 20Hz to 20KHz HARMONIC DISTORTION e Generally within 0 05 rising to approx 0 14 at 4dB above nominal output level 2nd harmonic predominant AMPLITUDE FREQUENCY RESPONSE e Line in 10Hz to 15KHz within 0 5dB e Mic in 10Hz to 15KHz within 1dB e High pass filter 3dB down at 25Hz 12dB per octave PHASE REVERSE e Push button phase reverse switch and LED indicator reverses phase of all signals FILTER e Push button high pass filter switch andindicator operates at 25Hz at 12dB per octave VC2 14 INSERT ae e Push putton insert switch and indicator allows comparison of inserted outboard equipment V2 OUTPUTS XLR High level bal
14. plug in capacitor microphones before turning on the phantom power LINE INPUT The line input is a high impedance floating balanced input suitable for any line level audio signal The line input is disabled when mic is selected by the mic line switch and vice versa INSERT POINT This is used to insert another effect or outboard equipment into the Tube Channel The microphone line amplifier output appears on the tip of the 1 4 inch jack socket the ring is the return input When no jack is inserted the socket is normalled internally linked MIX INPUT This is an auxiliary 1 4 inch jack unbalanced line level input which mixes with the normal mic or line This input is immediately before the compressor VC2 12 OUTPUTS The two XLR output sockets are balanced low impedance and are resistor buffered from each other The HIGH LEVEL output is low impedance A single 1 4 inch jack socket provides high level balanced line output V2 balanced output at zero level The LOW LEVEL output is 200 ohm impedance microphone level 40dB Connections are e Pin 1 is ground or screen e Pin 2 is positive phase or hot e Pin 3 is negative phase or ground for unbalanced Output balancing is achieved electronically and these outputs behave in a similar way to transformers POWER Mains input is 230 110V AC via the IEC socket The socket has an integral fuse holder with a spare fuse fitted Rotation of the fuse holder selects a
15. rue compression over a limited range They had a soft threshold where compression started and held to a predictable ratio up to a certain level then they returned to a more linear amplification allowing transients through This is in stark contrast to modern VCA compressor limiters where designers latched onto the idea that a compressor should be entirely linear in its compression characteristic regardless of the sound produced and thought it sensible to combine the functions of compressor and limiter to stonewall any and all signals above a certain level The musical effect is that VCA compressors sound muddy and flat while the historic compressors sound lively and retain sparkle But all compressors change the sound to some extent The JOEMEEK Tube Channel compressor adds punch and bite without the dull muddiness of all others USING THE COMPRESSOR A compressor IN OUT switch is fitted When this switch is pressed the LED indicator alongside switches off in preparation for a red compression signal To USE the compressor set the COMPRESSION control to somewhere near full up Set ATTACK to minimum full anticlock and RELEASE to halfway Switch the VU meter to COMP METER switch out If there is sufficient audio signal from the input amplifiers the meter will start to indicate compression by the needle moving downwards The compressor should now be working and ears can take over the adjustments VC2 6 Th
16. sounds are only possible if the recording channel keeps the response and phase of the lower frequencies flat and under control To achieve this the JOEMEEK Tube Channel has an extended frequency range down below 15Hz This ensures that there are no sudden phase shifts in the low end The proof of the theory is that the sound from the Tube Channel is characteristically full bodied and rounded in character Such extreme LF response can often bring its own problems so a subsonic High Pass filter can be switched in with a front panel push button OVERLOAD MARGINS In the mid 1970s Ted Fletcher designed a range of mixers specifically for use by the Independent Broadcasting Authority and the BBC One of the specification clauses insisted on by them was an extreme overload margin in the microphone amplifier The reason was that although momentary overloads transients are not audible they have an effect on perceived quality A high overload margin amplifier just sounds better Nowadays many of these notions have been forgotten and quality electronics is getting rarer and rarer But the JOEMEEK Tube Channel applies these professional rules and achieves a clean transparent sound Line level inputs are plugged into the JOEMEEK Tube Channel via an XLR connector The line input is electronically floating balanced using the Superbal electronic circuit designed by Ted Fletcher in the mid 70 s The circuit gives excellent rejection of electric
17. y COMPRESSION PROBLEMS 1 Got signal going through but no compression Is the compressor switched in Is there enough signal A high signal is required to make the compressor operate Have you turned the COMPRESSION control high enough The normal place for the compression control is near or at full up 2 It s noisy The compressor itself is extremely quiet but by definition compressors raise the level of quiet passages this also means that if there is noise in the microphone channel in the audio signal that is being amplified there will be more noise on the compressed signal It s a compromise 3 It distorts VC2 8 No it doesn t Distortion inside the compressor is virtually impossible however it is possible that the microphone amplifier is set with too much gain turn down the COMPRESSION control and readjust the microphone amplifier gain VC2 9 4 can t make the compression gentle enough It takes practice The setting of the Attack control close to fastest is quite critical as is the compression control WHAT IS AN ENHANCER An enhancer or exciter adds a particular type of sparkle to sounds particularly voices It appears to create brightness from sounds that were flat The enhancer in the JOEMEEK Tube Channel in common with the other JOEMEEK enhancers works by picking off the higher frequency part of the sound compressing and dynamically altering it filtering off the original sound and remixing

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