EasyManuals Logo

Apollo Thunderbolt User Manual

Apollo Thunderbolt
222 pages
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Page #177 background imageLoading...
Page #177 background image
Apollo Thunderbolt Software Manual Unison 177
Unison Load/Save Behaviors
Caution: Apollo hardware preamp settings (including +48V phantom power) may change
when Console sessions are loaded. Details are explained in this section.
Loading Unison Plug-In Settings
When Unison plug-in settings are loaded in Console, the effect upon the currently active Unison
plug-in settings varies depending on how the settings are loaded. Its important to understand
the distinction, because critical preamp settings can be affected.
Note: When Unison plug-ins are used in Console’s standard inserts and/or within a DAW,
this section does not apply. Settings load behavior outside of the Unison insert is like all
other (non-Unison) UAD plug-ins.
There are two ways Unison (and non-Unison) plug-in settings can be loaded in Console:
Plug-In Presets – UAD Presets are loaded whenever a UAD plug-in is inserted (the
default preset loads). Presets can be loaded from disk files via the Presets Manager or
the UAD Toolbar. Preset files are used to save & load all settings of individual plug-in
titles.
Console Sessions – Console sessions are loaded from disk via the Sessions Manager
Popover, the Console Recall plug-in in a DAW, or by double-clicking Console session files
on disk. Console sessions are complete Apollo configurations, containing all hardware
and plug-in settings (i.e., Console sessions are Console presets).
Loading Presets: Hardware settings are inherited
When a Unison plug-in is assigned to the Unison insert and a preset is loaded into the plug-
in, the plug-in inherits the current equivalent hardware settings of the Apollo preamp, if those
settings are available in the plug-in.
In simpler terms, Apollo’s preamp settings always override a Unison plug-in’s settings when a
preset is loaded or the plug-in is inserted. This is done to prevent the plug-in’s settings from
switching the hardware to values that could cause extreme level changes and/or other unwanted
circuit changes such as +48V phantom power.
For example, if the PAD is ON in the Apollo preamp, when the Unison preset is loaded, the pad
setting in the plug-in is enabled to prevent unexpected level increases.
Loading Sessions: Hardware settings are overridden
When a Console session is loaded (via Console Recall menu, DAW sessions containing the
Console Recall plug-in, or double-clicking Console files on disk), ALL Console settings are
overridden (changed) by the saved session, INCLUDING ALL APOLLO HARDWARE INPUT
SETTINGS.
In simpler terms, Console sessions always override Apollo’s preamp settings, even if potentially
harmful preamp settings are contained in the session file. This is done because the very
concept of Console session recall is to reproduce all settings in the session.
For example, if the PAD is OFF in the Apollo preamp, when the Console session is loaded,
the pad setting in the plug-in is disabled and sensitive equipment could be affected, such as
speakers (level increases) and/or ribbon mics (+48V phantom power).

Table of Contents

Questions and Answers:

Question and Answer IconNeed help?

Do you have a question about the Apollo Thunderbolt and is the answer not in the manual?

Apollo Thunderbolt Specifications

General IconGeneral
TypeAudio Interface
ConnectivityThunderbolt
Bit Depth24-bit
DSPUAD-2
Sample Rate192 kHz
Thunderbolt Ports2
DSP ProcessingUAD-2
Software IncludedUAD Software

Related product manuals