nigeynige wrote:Other leakage comes from the Backlightin, but I only use this to impress my mates or when I need to illuminate myself to segregate myself from the skin basher and the 6 and 4 string musicians of the band.
So yours makes a ghost note on the right channel too? Hmmmm.... As for the backlight, although there is an audible ringing from the backlight, it never seems to bleed into the outputs (which goes along with what the manual says)
I agree though you though- I can't think of a cooler looking piece of kit.
goldphinga wrote:You should check your gain staging. My gut feeling is you have the voyager output set low and your preamp/soundcard gain set high.
You may be right- I'll give your suggestion a shot when I go back home tonight.
I'd love to be able to fix this with some new volume settings, but I don't see how: In my current setup, there are basically three volume knobs in play:
1) the Moog's onboard mixer (each oscillator's volume)- since this setting is part of the characteristic of the patch's sound, I'm assuming that there's not much I can do to correct the situation from this control. These knobs DO affect the ghost note's volume, but I don't think I should have to tweak each oscillator's volume to remove ringing each time I choose a new patch. That, and to eliminate the ringing, I'd have to turn it down too low.
2) the master volume control- I typically have this at around 2 or 3. Turning it up or down doesn't seem to affect the volume of the ghost note.
3) the volume knob on my amp- this is also typically around 2 (very low). It's a small practice amp, so there's literally only a volume, treble, and bass. Turning the volume up or down does affect the volume of the ghost note.
Since it seems to be leaking as far upstream as the oscillator's volume, I don't know if I'll be able to correct it with a setting.
Maybe I should call Moog and run it by them, too- it just seems too weird that it's really only bad on the right channel.
thanks,
Joel