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        SLAM Manual 11-22-2004
         Contents
1.                                           SONILLAS iNVIS           15                                15 HOS SALVIdWAL          29    
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3.          LEFT SIDE  SUM        140 170VDC 120 140VDC  lo lo  22K 22K          E  STEREO LINK                                                                                                                                                                        ii  AN        LINE AMP GAIN      LINE AMP BIAS                            METER GR    3       e                                                           MIC AMP BIAS                                                                            MIC AMP BIAS THD                                                                                                                                                                                           LED LOGIC                            CONTROL BOARD    amp                                                                                        1  To Open  Disconnect the AC Power cable  let sit 15 minutes to allow the power supply capacitors to discharge  Remem   ber there are high voltages  350VDC  used in the SLAM  and that the capacitors may continue to hold a charge after AC  power and or power supply connector is removed   Remove the two Philips Machine screws located on the perforated top  cover  towards the back   Slide the top cover out towards the back  There are 3 LEDS located towards the back and center   They indicate capacitor charge  If one is lit   wait for full discharge and the LED to completely go out  and then it is safe   BE CAREFUL  We suggest using gloves and o
4.      a grounding option and set whether the XLR outputs        PIN 1 grounded  to Circuit Ground or Chassis Ground  These are factory wired for Chassis Ground  so that hum current is dumped to chas   sis  The XLR inputs are wired for Pin 1   Circuit Ground because the Phantom Power return is carried on Pin 1 or ground  reference     5  Replacing Meter Bulbs  New units like this use very long life LEDS  For older units lamps are available from Manley   12 volt Festoon  and available from Selco part number 19 29 39 12V  You remove the two small Phillips screws  back   top  center  which allows you pull the white light cover panel away  Gently pry out the old bulb  insert the new one and  screw the panel back on  Note that a few of the very first units used 26V lamps and if in doubt  the volts are marked on the  bulb     17       SLAM  FACTORY ALIGNMENT PROCEDURE    Prep    1   4 dBu  1 23vAC   1kHZ Oscillator fed into XLR LINE INPUTS   2  UNBALANCED LINE OUTPUTS feed Level  amp  Distortion Analyzer   3  Select LINE on SOURCE  L amp R LIMITERS off  Phantom OFF    4  Set INPUT  amp  OUTPUT LEVELS for 12 00    5  Set ELOP LIMITER  amp  FET LIMITER fully CW    6  Set SC HZ to FLAT  ATTACK to  1 SECOND    7  Set LINK to DUAL MONO  off     8  Set LED to PEAK  VU to I P  VU to OdB     Power  1  POWER UP supply toggle     verify zero AC amps on external Variac current meter   2  POWER UP front panel POWER   spikes and settles to 0 5 amps    VU meters lit  POWER button lit RED  3 intern
5.      choices        LINE  DI                     phase  reverse   and MIC 100 HZ  high pass filter  which has a little graphic showing the filter  LINE selects the BALANCED LINE INPUT  Combo jack  XLR or 1 4     and is intended for  4 dBu signals  but by cranking the INPUT level can be used with  10 dBv signals    DI selects the INSTRUMENT INPUT jack and routes it through the mic preamp for lots of gain if needed  MIC also uses the BAL   ANCED LINE Combo jack and routes it through the mic pre for 60 dB of gain  and another 20 dB by cranking the OUTPUT level    MIC    is the same except opposite and just phase reversed  the proper term is polarity reversed   MIC 100 Hz is normal polarity but  the lows below 100 hertz are filtered out which is useful on many vocals and overheads  to remove pops  air conditioning rumble  etc     2  INPUT  This is the first volume control and has about 60 dB of range for MIC and DI  and from  20 to  20 for LINE  For LINE   the normal setting will be 12 00  or straight up  but this isn   t the rule or an absolute calibration  For MIC or DI  the knob might be  anywhere depending on the mic  the loudness of the instrument  the distance  etc   and it might be prudent to turn the knob down to  start  rather than starting at 12 00     3  OUTPUT  This is the final volume control and is used to set the output level to tape or disk  and as the    gain make up    after the  Opto Limiter  if you need to compare    limit and bypass     The FET Limiter senses
6.    ol soldering iron      13  LIMIT RIGHT  Just like 11  but for Channel 2  Push to engage limiting and the OUTPUT level     14  VU  Selects the source for the VU meters  I P  input  shows the level directly after the INPUT level pot and is a good place to set  the MIC PRE gain or rough out operating levels  O P  output  shows the output level appearing on the output jacks  GR shows the  OPTO Gain Reduction  but not the FET  Most Opto Limiters use a VU to display gain reduction  When the limiters are bypassed the  VU drops to below  20 which is not intended to imply extra hard limiting  The Opto can also be displayed on the LED meters  with an  expected increase in speed because the Vactrols in the Opto Limiter are faster than VUs     15  VU ATTENUATE  One can also pad the VU   s down by 3 or 6 dB which is especially useful if the client is in the room and eye   ing the VU needles pegged in the red  Mastering engineers need this because a final mix has a lower ratio of peak to average level   and probably lower again after mastering  The SLAM  will tend to do that too  For individual tracks  we expect the 0 or no pad to be  the most common but it depends on the instrument and distorted guitars may few and moderate peaks  but some percussion has huge  peaks  We suggest the 3 dB pad for most mastering  and allowing about 3 6 dB below digital full scale on the peak meters  Why  FIR  filters usually need 1dB to 2 dB of headroom  MPEG usually requires 4 6 dB  the mastering enginee
7.   24    away from gear that may be sensitive     21         MAKES NOISES WHEN THE FRONT PANEL IS TAPPED        easy one  Some tubes become microphonic over  time  That means they start acting like a bad microphone  Vibration has caused the supports for the little parts in the tube to  loosen and now the tube is sensitive to vibration  Easy   Replace the tube  Which one  The one that makes the most noise  when you tap it  Usually this will be one of the smaller  gain stage  tubes  12AT7A  closest to the front  The SLAM  will  have to be on  connected and speakers up but not too loud for the sake of your speakers  With more gain comes more micro   phonics so be real about your expectations     IT GOT HISSY   Also easy  This is again a common tube symptom  You could swap tubes to find the bad boy  but an edu   cated guess is OK too  Generally the first tube in the path is the one with the most gain and dealing with the softest signals   The usual suspect is the shorter tubes   the 12AT7A voltage amplifiers  You may find that you need to choose the quietest  tube out of several of that type   like we do at the factory     DISTORTION   This might be a tube  Swapping is a good way to find out  It may be a wiring thing or mismatch as well     Wiring problems usually accompany the distortion with a major loss of signal  Mismatches are a bit tougher  The SLAM  has  a high input impedance and low output impedance that can drive 600 ohm inputs of vintage    style    gear  Best place to 
8.   MODE 2 GR Toggle UP    TOTAL  FET OPTO  amp  HOLD                            TOTAL GR  FET              ADDED                        peak hold                                                                                                                                                  AFTER 2 SECS  THESE TOP LEDS  ALTERNATE  INDICATING OK  TO SELECT ANY  PEAK HOLD DOT    INFINITE    TIMED  1 SEC     NO HOLD       MODE  4 SELECT  MODE PEAK HOLD TYPE                                                                                                                            EE O            gt                 KE         O Ld  Ld      SS  Ld        MODE 4  O E                                Ld                3  O                            CHANGE                   Mone 2       F Smas          Ld      MODE 1        ____ Juan                                        VU METERS    Two toggles are used for the VU meters  One is used to select  whether the VUs display Input Level  after the Input Pot   Output  Level  or the OPTO Limiter Gain Reduction  If in BYPASS the  OPTO      the meters drop out rather than sit on zero  A VU meter  showing OPTO GR seems to be a bit of a standard and the time  constants and ballistics are a good match  even if the VU does not  show every drop of gain reduction  The LED meter also can dis   play Opto GR or the total gain reduction     The second toggle is a pad or attenuator for the VUs in the Input  or Output modes and has no effect on GR mode  The 3
9.   and hot aggressive colors can be dialed in with the FET limiter     The LED Gain reduction display is 1 dB per segment  We have seen numerous people at trade shows  dial up 15 30 dB of gain reduction presumably to see a good number of LEDs flashing  It is still a limit   er and should be treated with some respect of the damage a powerful limiter in the wrong hands can do   In other words  it can be particularly vicious  The worst case scenario is bass heavy mixes  fast attack  and releases  and deep limiting  where some GR modulation can happen  Though much has been done  to allow those very fast releases  which maximize loudness  it does pay to be aware that distortions and  edginess might be a side effect  Sometimes the best answer is exactly what many mastering engineers  do daily  which is use 2 or 3 compressor limiters each doing a few dB rather than one doing 10 dB  The  LED meters can be very useful in comparing peak levels  especially when used with the Bypass button   Part of the secret to getting the most out of the SLAM   is to learn the LED meter modes  Everybody  has a favorite display mode  but they all are rather useful and you may find yourself changing modes  more than expected  Of course  some rely too much on the meters and forget to listen and assume that  particular operating levels are important  There is a healthy range of signal levels that are easily accom   modated  We only suggest using less limiting for the first few weeks until you are reasonabl
10.   nor can it be  on a Swiss Army Knife  that has multiple inputs and outputs  mic pre amps  etc  A  hard wire bypass on a mastering version is a bit more likely     12  POWER  OK  we won   t do a 300 word description of a power switch this time  Push it  it lights RED  and turns on the bulk of  the Outboard Power Supply  which has been on idle drawing almost zero current   If it doesn   t  remember that there is also a power  switch on the power supply that has to be turned on   The VU meters should light up  and about 30 seconds later the MUTE relay  disengages  to prevent tube warm up thumps  and audio should be available or rising gently  This box has a long warm up time but  should be stable in a minute and very nice in 15 minutes  Power down mutes immediately  This might be a concern in a live situation   plan accordingly     If you are not using it for 8 hours  you might as well turn it off to save power bills and tube life  There is a school of thought that  suggests that the initial turn on is the hardest on tubes  and shortens their life and to some degree that is true  From our experience  it  all depends on the individual tube and some last 30 years and some 30 seconds  If you are concerned with tube life and down time  re   pairs etc  buy a set of extra tubes and save yourself some panic when you least need it  Changing a tube is almost as easy as changing  a light bulb and once the top cover is removed should take 20 seconds  compare that to a repair needing the 
11.  De essing a lead vocal is relatively easy  Limiting a mix will prob   ably seem to affect the drums first  because in a typical mix drums  are the source of most of the transient spikes  The initial attack or  transient gets pulled down  spikes you probably liked during track   ing  but also everything else gets pulled down for that instant  So  drums begin to sound more distant and feel pulled back in the mix   and you spent an hour fine tuning that part of the blend   they begin  to sound dull  because the transient contains the bulk of their highs    and reverbs and room mics seem to get louder  When limiting hits  vocals  some good things and some questionable things can happen   Plosives  Ps  Bs Ds Ks  might get hit and alter carefully sung pronu   ciations  but sometimes  after EQ  plosives need some taming  Some  singers hit high notes a lot harder  and fader riding  compressors  or limiters are needed  hopefully  in that order   In the end  if indi   vidual tracks and sub groups are limited first  then  not only is final  limiting and mastering easier  but also it is easier to mix  as well as  to create dynamics in the mix  By the way  vintage recordings rarely  used a buss compressor   its a fairly new trend  If you do limit the 2  buss  watch out for quiet sections and the drum balance in the mix   and use those ears     14    Which brings up the first thing last  The traditional way to have  loudness  dynamics  excitement and smoothness all at the same  time is wi
12.  If you run out of range on the trim  exit Mode 3  tweak the trim  to approximately center  then go back to Mode 3 and set the color  change point where you want     MODE 4  PEAK HOLD MENU   This is just for the peak hold dots in Mode 2  The selection is  displayed on the left LEDs    a  No peaks held  no dot   indicated by the lower of the 3 left  segments    b  Peaks held for 1 second  typical generic peak meter    indicated by the middle of the 3 left segments    c     Infinite    Hold  stores the peak until you manually reset by  a quick push down and release of the momentary toggle  This  mode is handy when the SLAM  is behind you and you need  to know after the fact  the loudest transient that went through   Unfortunately  it won   t hold a ADC clip indication     RESET    Each time a mode is changed  all settings are saved to non vol   atile memory  If you find that you have    out moded    yourself  or  that the meter is looking goofy  the factory default settings can  be restored as follows  With power off  press and hold the LED  Meter switch down  and turn the power on  The left meter will  light 2 segments red  the right green  release the switch     Sometimes the Opto will cause a stuck segment because the opto  GR is not slowed down  shared from the VU meter GR mode    Just change to Peak and back will clear the segments  or wait until  a the next hot peak clears it for you     INFINITE    TIMED 1 SEC     NO HOLD    INFINITE    TIMED  1 SEC     NO HOLD    INFINI
13.  LIMIT knob a bit for similar depths  of reduction when you change ATTACK  typical   There is another side chain that grabs much of the peaks  almost inaudibly  but our  ears tend to hear the side chain that has the ATTACK and RELEASE knobs  Use your ears to determine the best setting  Instruments  with fast transients like drums show the biggest differences  vocals less so  and soft flute like sounds may not be affected except for a  little threshold difference        8  RELEASE  This only affects the FET Limiter  There        11 positions numbered from 2 Seconds  slowest   to 10 milli Seconds   fastest   Slow releases tend to be the least audible and will be cleanest  Medium release times on the SLAM  are pretty fast for a lim   iter and where the most loudness increase tends to be  but if pushed too far also might be obvious with pumping or a volume rise after  the    cresendo     This may also be near the edge of when    modulation    starts to become audible  especially if there is a lot of bass en   ergy in the signal  Achieving maximum loudness cleanly is not automatic and might require a bit of play between threshold s  release  time and attack because it really depends on the music  The SLAM  attempts to minimise all the negatives  pumping  modulation  loss  of    energy    that is typical for a limiter with fast attack and release times because this is where the maximum loudness lives   but   this  is dancing on the edge of a dangerous cliff     The SLAM  release ti
14.  OTHER SIDE IS DEAD   Let   s assume this is not wiring  We are pretty sure  it is the SLAM  If it were solid state you would generally send it back for repair  Being a tube unit  you can probably  find the problem and fix it yourself in a few minutes  Not too many years ago  even your parents could    fix    their own  stuff by taking a bag of tubes down to the corner and checking the tubes on a tube tester   but these testers are hard to  find today  A visual inspection can usually spot a bad tube just as well  Be careful   there are some high voltages inside  the chassis and tubes can get pretty warm  but if you can replace a light bulb you should be able to cruise through this   Before you remove a tube  just take a look at them powered up  They should glow a bit and they should be warm  If one  is not  you have already found the problem  The tube   s filament  heater  is burnt out or broken like a dead light bulb  The  other big visual symptom is a tube that has turned milky white   that indicates air has gotten into the tube or we   ve joked     the vacuum leaked out     Either way replace the tube  Manley can ship you a tested one for a reasonable price  Before  you pull a tube  pull the power out  let the unit sit and cool and discharge for a minute or two  then swap the new tube in   then power  then check  Gentle with those tubes  don   t bend the pins by trying to insert the tube not quite right  A little  rocking of them as you pull them out or put them in helps  
15.  all this   decided each little part had to be right  and much was going to be quite new and elaborate  In the end  ELOP II was  not at all descriptive and after a    name this box    contest on our website it became the SLAM      We can start right at the basic tube circuits  These designs are unlike any others we know of  including previous  Manley circuits  so this is not a box with an old mic pre combined with an old Opto Limiter and a borrowed FET  limiter  This is all new  The tube circuit is a hybrid FET  tube design first used in the Manley Steelhead phono  preamp and provides the advantages of both technologies  You get the low noise of FETs  the headroom of tubes  the  gain of both and lower distortion than either typically  and a new texture in your tool kit     This is the beginning of the story and continues through the product and the manual  Some manuals seem to imply  that if you use    this box    then you are an instant mastering engineer or top producer with all the tools they use  This  strange manual is filled with warnings  caution flags  grumblings about some aspects of digital and has extended quo   tations from other other manufacturers  Our intention is to help the user  supply a bit of under reported info  and give  equal time to both what might help provide the sound you   ve been looking for and what might be considered ques   tionable or dangerous to your music  The SLAM   like other powerful processors  can be great or horrible depending    on h
16.  important differences     26    A few points inspired by some of the early comments from SLAM  users make it into this addendum  too     The SLAM  is designed primarily as an old school text book limiter and as such the Output Level knob  is not after the final FET limiter  The idea is to set the peak stop threshold and adjust the incoming level   which is why the level controls are larger  More fun is to be had adjusting the Input and Output Level  controls than the Thresholds  which can often just be thought of as    set and forget    especially if the FET  Attack time tends to live in one setting  The Output level is not a    gain make up    control typical of a  compressor but consider it as another Input level before the FET and after the Opto     Some of the skills or habits we have with soft compressors  might be less useful with a limiter  For  example  just setting it by ear  with similar input   output levels and an acceptable number of dBs of  gain reduction or approaching it as an effect might not get the best results  The approach of trying to  achieve a brick wall level and then tweaking how the unit is driven  those Input and Output knobs  usu   ally seems to work best  Put another way  limiters or limiting is not often a great effect in itself  but the  increased volume when it is used reasonably can be  So it is about loudness rather than a cool pumping  action  or pleasant warmth  It can do some of that  but was designed to be pretty clean for a tubed unit 
17.  less again at M   13  Decrease Oscillator by 6 dB   s  VU   0   Return FET LIMIT fully CW  off    Return VU   O P     19    LED Meter Trims  This is done in MODE 2     1  With OVU  adjust AUDIO PEAK trim  sidechain board  for 4 segments lit  Increase oscillator by  6 dB  amp  Be sure L amp R are even  Verify 10 segments lit  4th dot from top   adjust AUDIO PEAK trim  if needed     2  Kill oscillator verify no segments lit  Verify  20 dB in lights the first segment     3  Set LED to GR  With FET LIMIT at 9 00 adjust for 4 Yellow segments lit  Be Sure L amp R are  even     4  Use music to verify display is nice  balanced and no segments are dead  Go through Mode 1 Peak  and GR  verify in GR both FET and OPTO are displayed  Do the same for Mode 2 Peak and GR  5   Go to Mode 3  verify LED TRIM  front panel  changes color change point  Leave trim in middle of  range   Factory default 3 Yellow led   s lit        ADJUST      A   Go to mode 3  left bar lits    B   Hit reset one more time fast  left bar flashes  Adjust LED TRIM middle of range    C   Hit reset one more time fast  left bar stop flashes  Adjust LED TRIM for three yellow segments  lit    D   Go to mode 2   Mode 2 Factory default     6  Go to Mode 4  verify Peak  Peak Timed and Peak Hold modes   Mode 4 Peak Timed Factory  default     7  Power down  hold MODE TOGGLE down  and power up to return to default settings     Holding the toggle down as you turn power on resets the LED meter to factory defaults     Holding the tog
18.  position  switch gives 0  no attenuation and calibrated to  4dBu    3 dB and   6 dB  While it is very unusual to get an attenuator for VU meters  on standard rack processors  it is a feature we have been building  onto mastering consoles for many years  A regular VU meter would  be continually pinned in the red without the attenuator  which may  have a disturbing effect on some clients   There are several reasons  for this  some pre dating the trends of heavy squashing  Compare  individual acoustic tracks at DFS  to a mix at DFS  and the mix  will generally look hotter on the VUs  Mixes tend to have more  average energy than individual tracks  Both mixing engineers and  mastering engineers often  usually  compress a mix  which also  increases the ratio of average to peak somewhat  For example in  recording  typical peak to average ratios are 16 to 20 dB  but in  mastering 14 dB or less     The SLAM  is a Swiss Army Knife and is intended to be used for  much more than just mixes and mastering  Because it can severely  reduce the ratio of average to peak levels  and because most of  us now reference levels to digital full scale  a peak reading   it  follows that without the attenuator  the poor VUs would be    in  the red    much of their life  We caution that the  6 position can  mislead one into a situation where the audio is really too hot  or  too squashed  On mastering consoles  the most often used VU pad  is    4      a hint      METERING GENERALLY    The VU meters and t
19.  protect the environment  human health and  contribute to the prudent and rational use of natural resources  Collecting electrical and electronic equipment and waste prevents the potential contamination of    nature with the hazardous substances which may be present in electrical and electronic products and equipment     Your MANLEY or LANGEVIN retailer will assist with and advise you of the correct way of disposal in your country     23       Input Tubes   Output Tubes           Micpre    Gain    Input Impedance   FET Limiter     ELOP Limiter     Frequency Response     Maximum Output   THD N   Dynamic Range     Output Impedance     Power Consumption     SPECIFICATIONS    2      2         NOS GE specially selected by Manley Labs for lo noise and stable bias  2 x 6414W NOS USA dual triodes   MANLEY transformer coupled Balanced Inputs and Outputs  Selectable 48V phantom power and PHASE REVERSE   60dB max Micpre  43dB max DI  20dB max Limiter Gain   20000 Micpre  1MegQ DI   Attack  approx  100uS  Release  10mS to 2Sec  Ratio  better than 20 1  Attack  approx  10mS for 6dB GR  Release  2 5 Sec  Ratio  10 1   5Hz to 60KHz    32dBm   30dBm  into 1KQ load     lt  05    1KHz   115dB typical   200Q    0 480 Amps  480 milliamps   480mA    120V   57 6 Watts  0 240 Amps  240 milliamps   240mA    240V   57 6 Watts    Outboard Power Supply  factory set for original destination country   s mains voltage     Operating Mains Voltage  changeable with power transformer re wiring via switch and 
20.  seem louder  but the limiter can seem louder  in the hotter passages when it is just grabbing transient peaks  The  compressor might be smoother and more tolerant of settings  but  won   t offer the protection and    drive    of a well set up limiter  The  compressor   s job is to reduce the difference between soft and loud  in a smooth even way  The limiter   s job is to inaudibly stomp on  the hottest transients  and prevent peaks from getting above a set  threshold  It   s all in the names     How can you tell when you have it set wrong and set right  There  is no    wrong or right    that applies to every day  but we can suggest  the usual things an engineer listens for  You should experiment  with some drastic settings when you are alone or can without scar   ing a client  There are 3 main things and the amount of reduction  affects each of them  so it is worth trying some heavy handed set   tings to imprint the symptoms to your audio memory     The first is modulation distortion  When a limiter is set for dan   gerously fast releases  the bass waveform gets into the sidechain   causing the gain of everything to be changed on a low frequency  cycle by cycle basis  The result is a ratty sort of distortion  not  really bright and edgy like clipping  but usually not very pretty  either  and often not very useful creatively  With the SLAM    s FET  limiter  you can easily set releases that are way too fast and cause  modulation if there are any significant lows in the signa
21.  the signal right at the output jack  so it acts as if it  is a final limiter after the OUTPUT level  Circuit wise the FET Limiter is directly after the Opto  and before the OUTPUT level  but  doesn   t act like it  and before the final tube gain stage  line driver  The range of this knob is about  20 dB to  20 dB with unity gain  near 12 00  Most of the time it will live between 12 00 and 3 00     4  OPTO LIMITER  A simple threshold knob for the OPTO limiter  Fully clockwise   26  is    out    and a good place to start  As you   turn this knob counter clockwise  there is more likelyhood that limiting will happen  Some dynamics units have the threshold go one   way and some the other  On the SLAM   all of the pots  should make the signal louder when turned clockwise   except the RELEASE  which is a switch      5  SC HZ  Side Chain Hertz  This is a HP filter in the Opto Limiter side chain that makes that limiter less sensitive to low frequen   cies  It does not affect the FET Limiter  The filter helps minimise pumping and strange volume changes  Sometimes kick drums and  bass seem to    trigger    too much limiting  The FLAT setting  bypasses the filter  100 filters 100 Hz by 6 dB and more for frequencies  below that  Similarly 200 filters 200 Hz 6 dB and more below but also boosts about 4 dB at 6 kHz for gentle and subtle de essing and  can be considered a vocal setting  Normally  2 filters like these require one to change the threshold significantly  but these are compen   s
22. 7 or 220     In case you were wondering about the handle  it is to mechanically protect the switches and fuse   The 4 mounting screws allow the supply to be mounted in a rack or screwed down to something     5    THE BACK PANEL                           INSTRUMENT    CHANNEL 1 INSTRUMENT    CHANNEL 2  BALANCED INPUT               po NoT wor PLUE            ANTON          SERIALNUMBER                                                        2 3 4    This is just a description of the various jacks and switches on the back  We suggest that you might want to not rack mount the SLAM   until you   ve spent some time becoming familiar with the various patching and switches  Sorry  but the back panel is more complex  than most   gear and there are options galore  That   s what happens when you get what everybody asks for     For simple maps that show a few examples of how to patch the SLAM   check out Page    1  POWER CONNECTOR  First verify the POWER SWITCH on the front panel is off  out  and Outboard Power Supply is off  tog    gle towards FUSE   The Outboard Power Supply has a captive 6 foot cable  with the mating plug  There is a painted white dot on the   plug that should face UP and or gently rotate it to find the    key    or where it fits  Force is definately not needed  Rotate the ring on the  front of the connector CLOCKWISE about 1 turn  which locks the connector in place    The SLAM  uses a trickle of power to remote control the power of the main supply  This means the Outb
23. DE  amp  RESET  down   PEAK   middle  and GR  up   During normal operation  the switch will  be in the center or up position and will control the display on  the meters based on the currently selected mode  The momentary  down  spring  position has different functions depending on the  current operating mode and how long the switch is held down     Holding the switch down for more than  5 seconds suspends nor   mal operation and enters the Mode Menu  indicated by a color   ful pulsing on the top 2 segments of the right meter  While in  this menu  one of 4 Modes described below can be selected  The  selected mode is shown by a lit segment surrounded by two oth   ers near the bottom of the right meter  You can scroll through  the 4 modes by pushing the switch down again quickly  before it  returns to    normal      Once the desired mode is lit  you    confirm     the choice by either waiting 2 5 seconds or once again pushing  down the switch but longer than  5 seconds  Modes    and 2 are  the normal display modes and normal operation resumes  Modes  3 and 4 are used to select options     Modes    MODE 1  DUAL DISPLAY   shows two things at once    Peak Position  center   Displays audio as a green and amber  bar from the bottom up  FET Gain reduction is simultaneously  displayed as a red dot from the top down    GR Position  up   Displays FET Gain Reduction as a Green bar  from the top down and OPTO Gain reduction as an Orange dot  from the top down    The Peak Hold dot and the t
24. ET Limiter       Because we couldn   t improve much on our old opto circuit we de   cided to add a second    type    of limiter with its own characteristics  and its own historical roots  Some early limiters like the 1176 used  FETs for the gain reduction element which offered much faster at   tack times and controllable releases     The problem with FETs when used as a gain control element is that  they can add unpleasant distortion unless the signal is very low  like   30 to  40 dB  and we also wanted a few gain controls which also  eat signal unless they are cranked  Throwing op amps around to get  gain where needed is easy  but not our style  Keeping to an all tube  Class A concept requires different approaches     We took a novel approach and used a transformer as part of the  shunt circuit  which not only reduced the signal to a nice level for  the FET but allowed us to use a pair of FETs in counter phase to  reduce distortion  An expensive approach but worth it     Our main goal of the FET limiter was to achieve the fastest release  that we could cleanly  This is the quality that causes the gain to  return as fast as possible  which is what gives us our perception  of    loudness     The goal here was a great    go louder    box  Fast at   tacks  and o   1 brickwall limiting is important to prevent    overs     but not for increasing the average level  A very fast transient that  gets through will clip but as long as the duration is short enough it  will not be perceiv
25. If the problem follows the tube you found the problem   a bad  tube  No soldering  no meters  one screwdriver   easy  See page 20 for a diagram of tube locations     HUM   Once again   several possibilities   several cures  Most likely it is a ground loop  Ideally each piece of gear  should have one ground connection and only one  However  the short list of grounds include the AC mains plug  the  chassis bolted to a rack with other gear  each input and each output  The two most common procedures are  try    3 pin  to 2 pin AC adapter  about a dollar at the hardware store  This while legal in many countries can be dangerous  We went  one better  Method two   On the back panel loosen the GROUND TERMINALS and slide the small metal ground strap  to one side  This is way better than    method           because it is safer and removes another possible source   the chassis  grounding via the rack  Method three   cutting the shield on one end of each cable  This is done by some studios at every  female XLR to    break    all ground loops  All the other gear in the rack is    dumping    ground noise onto the ground  Try  removing the SLAM  from the rack so that it is not touching any metal  You just may have cured a non loop hum  Some  gear radiates a magnetic field and some gear  especially if it has audio transformers or inductors  might receive that hum   A little distance was all it took  Also the remote power supply box will radiate a 60Hz magnetic field so it should be kept  6  
26. LIMITER  threshold will probably be required  conversly more clockwise for  VF settings     A CLIP setting is on the release switch  that introduces a very  rounded clipping with a variable threshold  This type of distortion  is reminiscent of speaker distortion and tends to be mentally associ   ated with    loud     Of course  more conventional clipping is possible  and by turning up the INPUT  and turning down the OUTPUT  or  if one wants    drastic    switching to MIC or INSTRUMENT will do  that of course  And  no  you won   t hurt anything as long as  phantom  is off  and you prudently turned the OUTPUT down first  It wasn   t  designed to simulate a guitar amp but intended to    assist    an already  overdriven tone  Mostly CLIP is used to get a few extra dB of    angry  loud        13       Hyper Compression       The word    Hyper compression  is a word mastering engineers use and  was coined by Lynn Fuston  Mastering Web Board  DSD vs 96 24    For many people it implies the idea of limiting and multi band limit   ing and normalizing and squeezing every last drop of apparent volume  possible onto a stereo mix but most mastering engineers would pre   fer not to  It has become almost a contest and everybody wants to be  louder than everybody else  Record companies expect it  or ask for it  and sometimes demand it  Mastering engineers are expected to do it  and are given mixes so brutally squashed that they can   t get any louder  anywhere without just clipping and distor
27. MANLEY     LABORATORIES  INC     MANLEY  SLAM     Stereo Limiter And Micpre    OWNER   S MANUAL    MANLEY LABORATORIES  INC   13880 MAGNOLIA AVE   CHINO  CA 91710 USA  TEL   1  909  627 4256  FAX   1  909  628 2482  emanley manleylabs com  www manley com             32 11 11        CONTENTS    SECTION    INTRODUCTION   POWER SUPPLY   BACK PANEL  amp  CONNECTING  FRONT PANEL   METERING   LIMITERS  HINTS  ETC    THE GUTS   FACTORY ALIGNMENTS  TROUBLESHOOTING   MAINS CONNECTIONS  SPECIFICATIONS   ADDENDUM FOR SLAM  MASTERING  TEMPLATES FOR STORING SETTINGS       INTRODUCTION  THANK YOU       for choosing the Manley SLAM   This unit combines Mic and Instrument Preamps  4 limiters  comprehensive meter   ing and is ready for or already has the digital converter option  As one might expect  the basic operations are fairly  simple and instructions may not be needed   but   the SLAM  has a lot of advanced features  and we strongly recom   mend reading through the manual  There are a lot of tricks and features that are not so obvious     In truth  the SLAM  started with the idea of an updated Electro Optical Limiter and the original working name was  ELOP II  That didn   t last long  First we developed a fast FET limiter  decided that fast LED metering was approri   ate  then added a mic pre  decided that this box would make the ideal    analog insert      a digital world     then added  almost every request and suggestion the customers had given us over the years  And somewhere during
28. TE    TIMED  1 SEC     NO HOLD    MODE    1 SELECT                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        MENU DISPLAY        e                             2 Lo                             O  2    Lo  I  a   5 Lo                      Ld                    C  Lo       CURSOR      O y  MODE    2 SELECT  MENU DISPLAY     EEE        L   I  L   I          1          SHOWING     TIMED 1 SEC        G S                                    Lo                     1     CURSOR 4 ___                            3                                     SELECT  MENU DISPLAY                    SS             Ld  Ld  C     1  PEAK HOLD            1  1       CURSOR  lt                       71        I                                1     Lo                                           MODE 4   PEAK  HOLD     MODE 3   COLOR  CHANGE     MODE 2   SINGLE        MODE 1   DUAL     MODE 4   PEAK  HOLD     MODE 3   COLOR  CHANGE     MODE 2   SINGLE    DEFAULT     MODE 1   DUAL     MODE 4   PEAK  HOLD     MODE 3   COLOR  CHANGE     MODE 2   SINGLE     MODE 1   DUAL     MODE 1             Toggle Middl
29. a    digital studio    with confusion about levels  They usually start out by using the digital  oscillator from their workstation and finding pegged VU meters the first place they look and they know it can   t be the workstation  Even a   6 level from their system pegs the meters  Some of you know already what   s going on  That  6 level is referenced to    digital full scale     and the converter might have 18 or 18 5 or 20 dB of headroom built in  That  6 level on the oscillator is actually a real world analog  12  or  14 and those VU meters don   t really go much further than  9 attenuated  There are a few standards and plenty of exceptions  One  standard is that normal  non broadcast  VU meters are calibrated for OVU    4 dBm   1 228 volts into 600 ohms  broadcast is sometimes   8dBm   Another standard is that CDs have a zero VU analog reference that is  14 dB from digital full scale or maximum  This allows  sufficient peak headroom for mixed material but would be a bad standard for individual tracks because they would likely distort frequently   This is why digital workstations use higher references like  16 and  20     VU meter hits red  OVU  at  4 dBm  a digital peak meter hits  red at about  18 dBm to  24 dBm Peak meters and VU meters will almost never agree   they are not supposed to  A peak meter is intend   ed to show the maximum peak that can be recorded to a given medium  VU meters were designed to show how loud we will likely hear a  sound and    help    set re
30. al LEDs lit  LED meter dances   3  After 30 seconds mute relay clicks   4  VU meters should read approximately 0 VU   5  Adjust INPUT for 0 VU  which should be close to 12 00     Tube Circuit Trims   1  Switch VUs to        Disregard the reading for now    2  Adjust LINE AMP BIAS  The gain should SLOWLY rise and distortion should drop to below   05    65  or around    70dB  It helps to set it so the plate volts are about 170vdc  As you adjust the   trim watch the distortion and when it    nulls     quickly note the plate volts then it is easier to trim for   that voltage than for the distortion    null  because of the slow speed of this trim    FET Drain Tube Cathode about 10 11vDC and FET Source 2K resistor about 4 5 5vDC   Plate about 160 180vdc  gate about 27mvAC and gain about 34 dB on this stage    Alternatively and assuming no test gear  the highest gain corresponds to the lowest distortion   This is a broad peak though and distortion may not be truly minimized but probably OK    3  Adjust LINE AMP GAIN trim for OVU   4 dBu  with OUTPUT set to 12 00    4  Verify distortion is nulled  or trim 2 is still at maximum gain    5  Reduce Oscillator by 34dB  24 5mvAC   SOURCE select MIC  VUs should show near zero but   won   t necessarily   no real trim for mic pre gain   Actually the INPUT pot typical    20  tolerance   is worse than the gain stage errors    6  Adjust MIC AMP BIAS trim for maximum gain  amp  lowest distortion  This is also a slow mov    ing trim and THD amp N 
31. ated to minimize that     6  FET LIMITER  Another simple threshold knob  One can blend any balance of Opto and FET limiters by using the two threshold  controls  Each limiter has its own character and advantages  and they complement each other  so that by using both  one can get most  of the advantages without the disadvantages  For example  the Opto can limit deeply  smoothly and has a high    ratio     but is a little  slow for drums  while the FET Limiter can be very fast  but not as deep  The Opto has inherant time constants but the FET can be  adjusted for attack and release times  What the Opto misses  the FET should catch  depending on how you blend them and the FET  ATTACK time     7  ATTACK  This just affects the FET Limiter  With compressors     attack knobs    are used to set how fast the compressor responds and  pulls down a signal  Traditional limiters don   t have this because it compromises the    concept    of limiting if there is any overshoot  We  compromised somewhere between    text book limiter    and    typical compressor     and simulated much of the    sound    of the attack con   trol while still providing more transient reduction than is apparent  VF is very fast   1 mS      is fast  1115  and    is moderate  10mS    VF is the best if you need to prevent    overs    and is closest to the traditional or text book limiter  F and M tend to let more transient  through but are also more punchy and may be less detrimental to drums  Expect to adjust the FET
32. better than none  and better than 10 dB of limiting   This  of course  means you have to use your ears and meters and  not presets  The idea is not how much limiting you can get away  with  but how much and how little is optimum and still sounds  good  The usual answer is 2 6 dB on a mix  assuming fast attack  time only      In simple quick comparisons  we generally tend to prefer the  choice that is louder and most people can be fooled into thinking  X is    better    than Y even with a fraction of a dB more volume  This  is really one place where a bit of extended listening is required to  determine which is actually better to listen to for any longer dura   tion  Transients and dynamics can be very nice too     Maybe you were just thinking  how much  or little  right  should  you limit the mix for the mastering engineer  So now you have  to consider how much limiting is appropriate for the artist and  song  how much is appropriate for the CD and that audience and  how much is appropriate for radio  for the label  for vinyl dance  tracks      If only one version is allowed   be careful  avoid regret   table squash     THE GUTS                                                                                              ni                   200    MOLTI     30ur 200v         MOLTICAP                      300V LED  O 4  18v LED                                           AA    SIDECHAIN BOARD                                                             FET METER  FET METER       
33. ble to service stations with    radio mastered    singles  from a password protected website  Most stations would prefer  uncompressed files to retain quality and prevent any issues  with    dueling algorithms     as stations often compress later on  in the chain  either when they store the material to hard disk for  on air playback  or in their studio to transmitter links  STLs      http   www orban com        16    We completely agree with Robert   s post and the suggestion to cre   ate a few masters with lesser amounts of limiting  Hopefully the  password protected web site can become available and producers  and or record companies can post optimized mixes for radio     Perhaps Robert   s post was aimed more at the abuse of multi band  limiters  but the SLAM  can be made to hyper compress  and or  distort which may cause problems further down the chain than just  the basic CD intended for home listening  It is just not that simple   For example  one might clip a track deliberately for a certain ef   fect or for apparent loudness  If during the song  a section has less  highs  a station   s multi band limiter may try to lift the HF bands   exagerating the HF harmonic distortion and making it more than  ugly  In fact  it might make it un playable by some stations     What might we suggest  Musicians might try to play at consistant  volumes  Mix engineers might limit individual tracks and sub   groups more than the mix  They might also want to rely more on  the mastering eng
34. cord levels to analog tape  they are slower and supposed to approximate RMS levels  By    help     we mean that they  can be only used as a guide combined with experience  Bright percussion may want to be recorded at   10 on    VU for analog tape to be  clean but a digital recording using a good peak meter should make the meter read as high as possible without an                 Here is the second  confusion  There aren   t many good peak meters  Almost all DATs have strange peak meters that do not agree with another company   s DAT   One cannot trust them to truly indicate peaks or overs  Outboard digital peak meters  with switchable peak hold  that indicate overs as 3 or  4 consecutive samples at either Full Scale Digital  DFS  are the best  They won   t agree with VU meters or Average meters or BBC Peak  Programme  PPM  meters either  Each is a different animal for different uses  When in doubt  use the recorder   s meters when recording    they    should    be set up and proper for that medium  Also important   if your external DAC has gain trims  and these trims are    out    it can  cause distortion  confusion  and a variety of mis matches  This is not the type of thing    phone support    is usually good at finding  We have  seen guys spend thousands on new gear only to find out a little screwdriver trim would have solved their problems       22    5                     5    Your SLAM  has been factory set to the correct mains voltage for your country  The voltage sett
35. cted to PIN   1  Same with the unbalanced 1 4 inch jacks   if driving a balanced input you can   t ignore the negative side  It needs to   be connected to the sleeve of the phone plug  Another way to do basically the same thing is join PIN 1 and PIN 3 on the  XLR male at the destination  Easiest way   Use the balanced with balanced  unbalanced with unbalanced  That is why the  options are there     LEVELS SEEM TO BE WRONG  NO BOTTOM   Several possible scenarios  Manley uses the professional standard  of  4 dBm   Zero VU   1 23 volts AC RMS  A lot of semi pro gear uses the hi fi reference of  10 dBm   Zero VU  This  is a 12 dB difference that will certainly look goofy and may tend to distort  The SLAM  has plenty of gain available on  the INPUT control to accomodate  10 dBv and or one can use the INSTRUMENT input  For  10dBv outputs  use the  1 4    unbalanced jack with the plug pulled out half way  If the loss looks close to 6 dB and it sounds thin then one half of  the signal is lost  The cause is probably wiring again  One of the two signal carrying wires  the third is ground   shield on  pin 1  is not happening  Check the cables carefully because occasionally a cable gets modified to work with a certain unit  and it seems to work but its wrong in other situations  Sometimes on XLR transformer inputs like this unit one has to  connect PIN 3 to PIN 1 and this is easy to do on the XLR cable  it happens with some unbalanced balanced connections      ONE SIDE WORKS FINE BUT THE
36. d main  output  Any plug or patch cord in any of the    returns    breaks the normal and unless there is a healthy  4 dBu signal inserted  there  you won   t see any limiting     The jacks marked EXT LINK  5 1  are just intended for those lucky guys with 3 SLAM s who need a way to link 5 or 6 lim   iters for surround work  Two regular Bantom patch cables are required  These jacks are parallelled  and the rings carries the  Opto audio link  the tip carries the FET DC link  The LINK toggle on the front panel must be in the BOTH  amp  EXT position  and all controls on all 3 units are used  The Opto Link blends all 6  the FET link uses the moment to moment highest signal  of the 6 channels     The bottom two jacks are unused at present  but might be useful for mods and special versions  We had an idea to use them  for a    blend    input because some guys like to use the drum sub mix to    push    the 2 buss limiters  but we felt this was a bit  excessive and can be done with the above side chain inserts easily enough     9  CHANNEL 2 BALANCED INPUT  Similar to Channel 1 described by 2  above    10  CHANNEL 2 BALANCED OUTPUT  Similar to Channel 1 described by 3  above   11  CHANNEL 2 INSTRUMENT INPUT  Similar to Channel 1 described by 4  above   12  CHANNEL 2 UNBALANCED OUTPUT  Similar to Channel 1 described by 5  above     7    THE FRONT PANEL                      1234567 8 13 14 11234567 8    1 SOURCE  This is the Input Selector that you use to choose the input to the SLAM     
37. e  Combination PEAK   FET GR                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       26                                          16  C    OUTPUT  O evel  Oo  11  C I    C  o  C    C i 6  SSS   SdBu             4 dBu     gt  lt   3 dBu    C  2 dBu E  O     6      MODE 2 PEAK  PEAK   PEAK HOLD       26             pr ak HOLD           PEAK  a O  21         C  OC i  C  O                     C DO  O E   C                     OC     11         1                   C C  C   6        5dBu    C  4 dBu   m  EZ  3 dBu fp   C  2 dBu    O   O 6  maz                               MODE   SELECT     COLOR CHANGE SET               O    SET with  TOGGLE  in UP  position    4          SET with  TOGGLE  in MIDDLE    position    AUDIO      USE   LED     TRIM           amp          COLOR     CHANGE                                                                               11             1  GR Toggle UP  Combination OPTO   FET GR                                                                                                                                            a                      2         3         74             5      6             L l   L         O                    Lo     OPTO GR            6       L l   L     C   E   O 2 1               Ld   Ld      26500                       
38. e lowers the ratio   if keeping a similar depth of gain reduction is wanted  The threshold markings are based on the  10 1 ratio and a setting of  18 is intended to help reduce DFS overs with a converter with 14 dB  of headroom over  4 dBm  Many mastering converters are set for 14 dB of headroom and the   18 setting would be a good starting point  Of course being an Opto  it cannot be ultra fast and  some peaks will probably get through and it generally will have the typical  puffy  sound of an  opto  because of its inherent time constants   It should be pointed out that much of that charac   ter is reduced when used in conjunction with the FET limiter  The FET usually catches some of  the overshoots and time gain behavior of the Vactrol and that can reduce the familiar Opto sonic  signature     The FET limiter has some subtle enhancements  some of which will not be apparent on all ses   sions  In particular  the LP LIM function will not be obvious unless the input signals are rather  hot and more than a few dB of limiting is taking place  LP LIM is meant for those jobs that  require more drastic treatments  If those conditions are met  1  the NORM setting may be verg   ing on    crunchy    and might seem dulled due to reduced transients  2  the LP LIM setting can be  less crunchy  and seem to have more    presence    because the FET limiter won   t be pulling down  as much mids and highs as it will lows where most of the energy is  It may also be difficult to  compare NORM a
39. e when one changes the change over switch       The SLAM  uses a 2 Amp SLO BLO fuse for 117 volts and a 1 amp SLO BLO fuse  for 220 volts       Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment  WEEE     Information for customers    The European Parliament and the Council of the European Union have issued the Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive  The purpose of the Direc   tive is the prevention of waste of electrical and electronic equipment  and to promote the reuse and recycling and other forms of recovery of such waste  As such  the Directive concerns producers  distributors and consumers     The WEEE directive requires that both manufacturers and end consumers dispose of electrical and electronic equipment and parts in an environmentally safe man   ner  and that equipment and waste are reused or recovered for their materials or energy  Electrical and electronic equipment and parts must not be disposed of with  normal household wastage  all electrical and electronic equipment and parts must be collected and disposed of separately     Products and equipment which must be collected for reuse  recycling and other forms of recovery are marked with the following pictogram     Small products may not always be marked with this pictogram in which case this is present in the instructions for use  on the guarantee certificate and printed on  the packaging     When disposing of electrical and electronic equipment by use of the collection systems available in your country  you
40. eak meter calibrations and digital con   verter I O levels are more prime examples  With digital peak me   ters that are married to digital converters  one at least expects that  an    over    in the A to D over would light the top red LED  Wrong    the better meters use 4 samples over and the best allow that number  to be user set  4 samples over is about the threshold of where we  hear a clip  Makes sense to me     The SLAM  LED meter is not digital  it is an analog meter with a  micro processor  It can be adjusted for different analog sensitivities  with an internal trim pot  but this is not guaranteed to    match    other  peak meters  nor was it intended to  The SLAM displays approxi   mately 1 dB per segment  except near the bottom which are much  bigger steps to show signal present  Other meters may show 2 dB  or 1 2 dB steps or be dB scaled on a curve     Our solution to allow some sort of matching with other peak meters   like the ones on your favorite A to D   is to give you a way to set  where the color changes occur  The transition from green to amber  is settable  and for mode 2  also the transition from amber to red   This can be done from the front panel without ever removing the  unit from the rack or unscrewing the top  mode 3      In order to provide some useful indication of A to D clip or overs   any green LEDS turn red  which is hard to miss  What is interest   ing  is that because the meter is looking at analog levels  one can  see how many dBs the peak 
41. ected to Pin 1 or the shield  There is also  a transformerless unbalanced 1 4    phone jack output described below  5      4  INSTRUMENT INPUT  This is a 1 4    mono unbalanced high Z input for guitars  basses  synths  etc  It has about 30 dB more gain  than the Combo jack input and uses the mic pre  The input impedance is 100K suitable for synths and guitar processors amp simula   tors but might be a bit dull for some guitars direct  For very high Z  10 meg ohm  physically insert the jack half way  Cool trick  huh   This will sound brighter for many guitars and basses  but should have little or no effect if any electronics are between the guitar and  input     5  CHANNEL 1 UNBALANCED OUTPUT  This jack provides an unbalanced  4 dBu output pre transformer  It can also provide a  semi pro or consumer  10 dBv with plug inserted half way        FAQ   Why no  10 input when you provide     10 output  There is no dedicated  10 dBu input but both the Combo jack  2  and Instrument Input  3   can be used in conjunction with the INPUT knob  Why share the same XLR for both MIC and LINE and no Phantom Switch on the front  It was origi   nally  but we added the HP filter on that switch  and felt it was    safer    for your speakers to have the phantom on the back  see item 17     Why no separate MIC PRE output  3 reasons  the mic pre would require a good line driver  no more space for more tubes   the opto limiter works  between both    sections     and the Combo jack is used by both mic a
42. ed as distortion  Very fast release times  unfortu   nately  usually imply modulation distortion where the limiter traces  the waveform at low frequencies rather than the volume envelope   This is inevitable  but we made it possible to achieve faster and  cleaner releases than usual  It can still get crunchy so be careful     This FET sidechain uses several techniques to get those fast releas   es  The usual full wave rectifier was replaced with a quadrature rec   tifier that uses 4 phases to determine peaks and allows twice as fast  smoothing  Then we combine multiple side chains and the typical  exponential capacitor release was modified for linear decay rates   All of this resulted in faster clean releases  thus more loudness  Still   at the fastest release times it is quite possible to get modulation dis   tortion  which is sometimes a useful color and often a problem with  wide spectrum sounds like mixes or instruments with lots of lows   Listen for a growly sounding distortion on faster release times     The multiple side chains also gave us the possibility of introducing  an attack switch  which is usually not found on a limiter  com   pressors  yes   The attack switch works on the slowest side chain   which gives much of the audible familiarity of the control while the  other side chains are still biting the fastest transients  Like most at   tack controls  as you go from fastest to slowest positions  you tend  to lose some threshold or limiting  so adjusting the FET 
43. esults from the    raw    tape and hated the maximized mix  and in the  end the one from the    raw    version was loudest anyways     Never heard  the opposite story  Why  Mastering engineers generally have the best  tools  the most tools  and the right tools for the job  and a    pre mas   tered    job often robs the mastering engineer of the opportunity to apply  those tools  and experience  and abilities  If you do use the SLAM  on  a mix  before it gets professionally mastered  you should have a ver   sion without it and or a version with light limiting  They also like 24bit  masters  and a little headroom  like  3 to  6 dB below digital clipping   and lots of accurate labels notes  Thank us later     Maximizing generally does not help the song sound any louder on the  radio or TV  Perhaps you know that they are old hands at that game and  have compressors  10 band limiters  4 band limiters  full range limiters  and clippers strapped across the audio chain all the time and have had  for 15 years  Everything comes out the same volume   as loud as they  can make it  Things can get silly because their boxes were set to work  on    normal    mixes and sometimes they get goofy when given super   squashed songs and songs that have lots of stereo or out of phase info   For them  width is bad  mono is good  it transmits further  gets bigger  audience share  bigger ad bucks Car CD players like over compressed  material and many now build a bad compressor into the car stereo  so  
44. for  4 dB displayed on VU   s    7  VU mode         Verify operation of STEREO LINK  amp  BOTH amp EXT   8  Run through SC HZ  Should see more GR at 100 and more at 200    9  Return          LIMIT fully CW  off   Return VU mode   O P    FET LIMITER   4 dBu  1 23vAC   IkHZ Oscillator fed into XLR LINE INPUTS    First do LED METER TRIMS steps 1 amp 2 ONLY    see next page     1  Start with FET BIAS  FET BALANCE  FET LIMIT trims in center   Main Board   RELEASE    15  ATTACK   VF  FET LIMIT fully CW  off   LED   PEAK  DUAL MONO   no link   2  Adjust FET BIAS for 1 dB of reduction   3  Increase oscillator by 6 dB   s  Input   10dBu   4  Adjust FET LIMIT fully CCW   5  Adjust FET BALANCE for maximum gain reduction  Usually trim will sit close to the center  position  Trim will show minimum gain reduction in both sides of the trim   6  Return FET LIMIT fully CW  off   Decrease Oscillator by 6 dB   s  Output    4dBu  or  VU   0   7  Repeat steps 2 to 6  8  Adjust FET BIAS for  1 dB   or just at the threshold when reduction begins     9  FET LIMIT   9 00 O   clock  Adjust GR for 4 dB of limiting  Output   0 dBu    10  LED   GR  Adjust FET METER trim  sidechain board  for 4 Yellow segments lit   11  Increase Oscillator by 6 dB   s Verify 12 Yellow segments lit  3rd dot from top    12  Run through RELEASE settings  Should see deeper GR at    2 sec    and less at 10mS in smooth  steps with a jump at CLIP  With RELEASE at  1S  run through ATTACK settings  and should see  less GR at F and
45. fuse value change     Mains Voltage Frequency 50  60Hz    Size  19    X 12    X 3 5     occupies 2u     Shipping Weight  25 Ibs     24    ADDENDUM FOR SLAM  MASTERING VERSION    The mastering version has a number of changes compared to the regular SLAM    1  There are no mic preamps or instrument inputs  Instead the tube sections are paral   leled for lower noise and distortion     2  All pots are replaced with rotary switches for detented resettability and easier cal     3  The mastering version has a true hard wire bypass function  which is not possible  on the regular version with mic preamps  etc  What was the Left Bypass  becomes the  full Bypass  in stereo and hardwired   No separate L  amp  R bypass buttons     4  The right BYPASS button becomes the Limiter Bypass  tubes  amp  transformers still  active     5  There are dedicated unbalanced transformerless inputs on the mastering version   What was the Phantom Power switch on the back now selects XLR or 1 4    inputs     6  The OPTO limiter now has 5 ratios  which may put it into the compressor limiter  category  The lower ratios may be better suited for complex mixes     7  The FET limiter has 5 modes  these last two features replace the INPUT selector      About item 6  the OPTO can be selected for 10 1  5 1  3 1  2 1 and a new    AUTO HF    mode  where high frequencies get a higher ratio and low freqs get a low ratio  This mode is the most  gentle  As with most compressors one might need to lower the threshold as on
46. g the SLAM   we began with the idea that probably we  could find alternate Vactrols that could be used to give some variety  to the opto limiting  In the end  after trying every one out there  we  decided the one we had always used  was our favorite and the oth   ers had more drawbacks than advantages  We did improve the drive  and metering electronics  and added a HP filter in the side chain and  added the jacks to allow a user to insert their own EQ into the side   chain  In most aspects  the opto limiter circuit is similar to the one  used in our previous Elop   s and uses audio to drive the LEDs  This  means that we can   t possibly adjust the attack and decay character   istics significantly without changing Vactrols  On the other hand   this mode of operation  seems to act more like an RMS respond   ing circuit and reacts to many sounds in a way that we prefer over  opto   s with the conventional attack  release  etc controls and all the  complications that a gain control element with its own timing char   acteristics adds to that recipe  To make a long story short  we like  what happens with that simple old school approach  The difference  in driver circuits plus the side chain filter does seem to make the  opto a lot more useful on mixes and drums than our previous units   We also allow some fast LED metering of the opto in addition to the  regular VUs which helps show how fast it tends to react and gives a  more complete picture for critical applications        The F
47. g to your dealer or Manley Laboratories  Our service department is available for questions by phone   909  627 4256 x325  online at  lt www manley com service php gt  or by email at  lt service manleylabs com gt   Fill    in your warranty card  Check the manual   your question is probably anticipated and answered within these pages     RTFM              Swiss Army Knife    The SLAM  is an unusual product that doesn   t quite fit into a simple  catagory  We get questions like    Why have a mic pre on a limiter       and    Why so many input and output jacks     and    Why      hard wire  bypass on this mastering processor      And the only answer is    It   s not  just a        it does    lot more     It isn   t a channel strip        EQ  besides  being stereo  It isn   t just another front end for the workstation  It isn   t  just a mastering processor  Maybe the SLAM  is a new category     The SLAM  is a an outboard limiter and a new low noise high gain  tube mic pre  and a mastering processor  and a DI  As a mic pre it  offers about 70 dB of gain and a new circuit  unlike any previous  Manley Preamp  The gain stages are based on a circuit developed by  Mitch Margolis for the Steelhead phono preamp  The SLAM  can be  used as a mastering processor  not a multi band limiter   a processor  that real mastering engineers use to create loudness without messing  up the mix  As a DI or Instument Input it offers 2 impedances  100K  and 10 meg ohms   plenty of gain  limiting  and if y
48. gle down as the meter does its opening dance displays the software version  If the left  display shows 3 LEDs and the right shows 2  you have LED Meter Software Version 3 2     20    TROUBLE SHOOTING    There are a number of possible symptoms of something not quite right  some may be interfacing  others we will touch  on as well  If you suspect a problem the following paragraphs should help     NO POWER  NO INDICATORS  NADA   Probably something to do with AC power  Is it plugged in  Check the fuse  on the back panel  A blown fuse often looks blackened inside or the little wire inside looks broken or its resistance meas   ures higher than 2 ohms  A very blackened fuse is a big hint that a short occured  Try replacing the fuse with a good one  of the same value and size  If it blows too  then prepare to send the unit back to the dealer or factory for repair  The fuse  is a protection device and it should blow if there is a problem  If the unit works with a new fuse  fine  it works  Some   times fuses just blow for unknown reasons     LIGHTS BUT NO SOUND   First try plugging the in and out cables into each other or some other piece of gear to  verify that your wires are OK  If not fix them or replace them  Assuming that cables passed sound   it probably is still   a wiring thing  The output XLRs are transformer balanced which require both PIN 2 and PIN 3 to be connected some   where  When driving an unbalanced input   inserts on some consoles  PIN 3 needs to be grounded or conne
49. he SLAM  peak meters will never agree and  maybe the SLAM  peak meters are a little    off    from the peak me   ters on an external ADC or DAC  What is going on  Which ones  do I trust  How can I calibrate them to look the same     These questions have been around for as long as there have been  meters  VUs should match well with other VUs because there is a  comprehensive list of standards and qualifications to meet to be a  true VU meter  Part of the specification are    dynamic characteris   tics    which describes    The pointer shall reach 99 on the percent  scale on 0 3 second  overshoot less than 1 5    15dB      This es   sentially makes the VU meter act with    approximate RMS    re   sponse and our ears have an    approximate RMS response     Ahh   hhh loudness     Peak Meters are much faster and are supposed to catch events less  than 0 0001 Sec  compared to the VU   s 0 3 Sec  which means  that transients have a much bigger influence on peak meters  One  problem is that our eyes won   t be able to adequately see a 0 1  mSec flash or even 1 or 10 mSec so the designer has to stretch the  duration of the leds or pointer  In a sense  this exagerates transient  contribution  but at least looks good  There can also be a peak hold  dot that adds a digital stretch to the duration and allows us the  luxury of blinking or looking away once in a while  We have that  in mode 2     In pro audio there are few measurement standards  or even de facto  standards  that exist and p
50. her attack controls you may have to adjust the  threshold down at slower settings to maintain some clip protection  but may notice that you don   t  have to adjust the threshold as much as one might expect with a conventional attack control  This  is because there is a very fast limiter still hitting transients that are near our threshold of identify   ing     Should also point out that the OPTO side chain filter has some level compensation built in   so that chopping off the lows  doesn   t cause a huge change in thresholds  There may be some  adjustment required depending on the spectral balance of the music though  With bright mixes  the 200 Hz may actually cause deeper limiting  plus there is a 3 dB peak above      to help  smooth excessive sibilance  though we don   t refer to it as a de esser     The hard wire bypass function is not quite as trivial as might be expected  It is a bit more com   plicated because of 2 input jacks  plus the 2 different outputs  plus all the metering  Selection of  either the XLR balanced  transformer  input or 1 4    unbalanced  op amp  is done with a    pull to  toggle    switch on the back panel  Like many of Manley   s processors  using the 1 4    unbalanced  output bypasses the final transformer and may be a little cleaner or open sounding compared to  the transformer output  which may be a little warmer and richer or evocative of some vintage  gear  Might be worth checking out each input and output while you learn the unit  Subtle but 
51. hird bar color are not available in this     dual display    mode    MODE 2  SINGLE DISPLAY    PEAK Position  center   This is a typical peak meter with a peak  hold dot  The bar is divided into 3 colors  Green  Amber  amp  Red  GR  Position  up   Displays the sum of FET and OPTO Gain Reduction   or the total limiting  from the top down  Both the limiters are added  together which may look a lot more drastic than it sounds and some  interpretation is required  It is most useful when minimal limiting is  the goal     10    MODE 3  COLOR CHANGE POINTS    You can change where the audio peak meters change color from  green to amber and from amber to red  This is an unusual feature  of this meter and lets you    match    the SLAM    s peak meter to  the meters on your digital recorder or work station  The SLAM   meters are analog and your other meters are very likely pure digi   tal so exact segment for segment matching is unlikely  This just  gives you a way to set color change points     Select Mode 3 with the momentary toggle and the display will  change so that the left meter is totally lit and the right meter is still  in audio peak mode  for reference   Below the POWER button is     small hole and a trim pot lives behind it  A small screwdriver or  tweaker is needed to adjust it  If the Mode Switch is in the center  position  then you can adjust the point where green changes to  amber  If the Mode switch is in the GR or up position  you can  change the amber to red point    
52. ics and a few DI boxes  We don   t know of  any dynamic mics or tube condensor mics that require phantom    d  Contrary to urban myth  we also don   t know of any mic that can be damaged by phantom  whether it needs it or not   except a few    modified    vintage ribbon mics that had their protective capacitors removed  Early Neve and Trident consoles  applied phantom power to every mic jack and offered no switch to turn it off  It is probably also a myth that some mics  sound better with phantom off  but not a myth that bad jacks and cables will sound better with it off  Use phantom power  only if its needed     7  GROUND TERMINALS  These provide separate grounds for use in some installations  with special star grounds or  other grounding techniques to prevent hum  In most situations the two terminals are simply connected with a wire  The   top terminal marked CHASSIS is the AC third pin MAINS ground which also connects to the chassis   s  rack rails and can  internally connect to XLR pin 1  The bottom terminal marked CIRCUIT is the internal audio ground  which also connects to  the 1 4    jacks sleeves     8  SIDE CHAIN INSERTS AND LINKING  These are all regular Bantam jacks  like are used in most patch bays  Why  these  Again size  space and they offer true  no BS inserts like a patch bay does  Most studios have Bantam to XLR adapter  cables  we used to chop long patch cables in half and solder on XLRs  and if they don   t  they should  All of the outputs are  impedance ba
53. ikely to trigger limiting than sounds down the center  and anything out of phase won   t be seen  by the limiter at all  We think a proper    mastering compressor    is supposed to react to the peak waveform of both the left and right  equally  or stop the same peaks that causes the A D to clip  This is easy in digital  but in analog it requires the user to use both sides   and that the limiters react equally based on whichever side has the loudest peak  So the SLAM  also has that mode    BOTH  amp  EXT     or the down position  This mode is also used for the back panel linking to other SLAM s for surround projects  For recording instru   ments the STEREO LINK mode is fine but for serious mastering the BOTH  amp  EXT mode is usually best     NOTE  No LINK of the  CLIP functions  because why have one side clip the other         10  LED  meter   This switch controls the LED bar graph meter  In the center position is basically an PEAK display of the audio out   put  The upper position is basically to display GR  Gain Reduction  especially the FET Limiter   The down position is a momentary  switch that RESETs the peak hold  clears the dot  and is used to select the LED meter MODE if held down for a few seconds  A full  and complete description of the LED Meter is on page 12  Suffice it to say here that it does a lot     11  LIMIT LEFT  Push it in to engage both the OPTO Limiter and the FET Limiter and the OUTPUT level control and it lights up  blue  This is not a hard wire bypass
54. ineer for final limiting  and their expertise and  experience with how product translates to broadcasting  Mastering  engineers have to consider the broadcast chains  A amp R people have  to realize that songs sell records  and a louder CD won   t make  much difference  In fact  a CD that is too loud  too aggressive  too  in your  face may also be too exhausting to listen to for more than  one or two songs   but A amp R guys don   t read manuals like this     In more direct practical terms  run the mix 3 times and create 3  versions with different depths of limiting  This gives the mastering  engineer more to work with  The mastering engineer can aslso do  the same thing and create 3 masters  Then the only trick is making  sure the right parties get the right version  without misdirection   Another idea mentioned earlier is limiting individual tracks  and  sub groups  One can also create loudness just in how tracks are  mixed and EQ   ed  In fact  absolutely great mixes need very lit   tle or nothing done in mastering  everybody   s elusive goal   The  worst mixes need the most processing  Slapping a drastic proces   sor on a bad mix is just that  and doesn   t make it a great mix or  make real mixing easier or    mixing    something that everybody can  do as long as they have that drastic processor  Just gotta mix well  first     Perhaps the best advice is to do what experienced engineers have  done for 50 years with limiters  Use them gently and carefully  A  few dB may be 
55. ing is marked on  the serial badge  located on the rear panel  Check that this complies with your local supply     Export units for certain markets have a moulded mains plug fitted to comply with local requirements  If your unit  does not have a plug fitted the coloured wires should be connected to the appropriate plug terminals in accordance  with the following code     GREEN YELLOW EARTH  BLUE NEUTRAL  BROWN LIVE    As the colours of the wires in the mains lead may not correspond with the coloured marking identifying the termi   nals in your plug proceed as follows     The wire which is coloured GREEN YELLOW must be connected to the terminal in the plug which is  marked by the letter E or by the safety earth symbol or coloured GREEN or GREEN and YELLOW     The wire which is coloured BLUE must be connected to the terminal in the plug which is marked by the letter  N or coloured BLACK     The wire which is coloured BROWN must be connected to the terminal in the plug which is marked by the  letter L or coloured RED     DO NOT CONNECT SWITCH ON THE MAINS SUPPLY UNTIL ALL OTHER CONNECTIONS HAVE  BEEN MADE     Note  There is a mains voltage change over switch that allows the SLAM  to be easily  configured for 117V or 220V wall voltage  This switch is on the remote power supply  and one needs a flat head screwdriver to change it  This should only be done with the  IEC power cable removed  DO NOT set it for the wrong voltage as this could damage  the unit  Also  the fuse must chang
56. ix  we generally lean on the FET Limiter for most of the  work  Releases again between 1 sec and  16 are OK  but  1s is  verging on dangerous  Attack will be important  VF attacks will  sound cleanest but less punchy  Adjust to taste and watch out for  loss of drums at VF and distortion at M  Adding some ELOP will  be subtle if more than 6 dB of FET limiting is used  We suggest  using the 200 SC filter to tame highs and de ess sometimes     Guitars may like the FET CLIP setting for a bit of extra crunch   Bass may require slow releases  and VF attacks for ultra clean  sounds  but for extra growl  there are quite a few settings that go  there  Faster releases  deeper limiting  and slower attacks each  contribute to various distortions  not to mention just overdriving  levels  Piano is difficult usually  but try faster attacks  slower re   leases and not too much limiting     Drums   well  you just gotta play with the SLAM  to find the most  appropriate sound  You can certainly tame dynamics  exagerate  room sound  crunch and mangle  Faster release times bring out the  room sound and ambiance  It   s a bit drastic  but you can use one  side of the SLAM  for mic pre and limiting  go out to an EQ  and  return to the other channel for yet more limiting  drive and A D  conversion  You might record that first channel as a minimally  processed back up too  Save something for the mix     15    Limiting and more limiting and more       The following is a small section of the Orban Opti
57. l  The cure  is slower releases  less limiting and or slower attacks  Settings  slower than 100mS are generally pretty safe but always listen     With the Opto  modulation can happen with about 10 dB or more  limiting on bass  You can use less limiting or try the side chain  filter switch  Keep in mind that the side chain filter will prevent  some limiting of loud low notes so there is a some risk of    overs      The combination of both the Opto  amp  FET can help share the load  for tougher signals like mixes and can be a sweet combination    The second typical problem setting for limiters and maybe even    more for the SLAM  is pumping  The worst case scenario is a mix  that has a very hot transient followed by a significanty quieter few  seconds  A limiter should grab the peak  shove the gain down suf   ficiently  then gradually return to normal gain  How gradually de   pends on where you set the release  If the limiter was set so that  it reduced 20 dB  then that quiet passage may rise in level 20 dB  over a short time  This can sound pretty wierd depending on that  quiet passage  Unfortunately  some of the moderate release times   like between 100mS and 500mS can be most obvious  Unfortunate  because  these are typically optimal settings for loudness enhance   ment  Faster releases might distort and slower might tend to hold  the gain down or sit between peaks or beats  We have known a  few engineers to change release times on the fly  for transitions  between big choru
58. lanced  30 ohms   single ended  4 dBu signals  The inputs are single ended  high Z  with the ring connected to  ground through a 30 ohm resistor and should be compatible with most pro gear  balanced or unbalanced     Some engineers like to patch in an EQ into the side chain of some compressors or limiters which alters how the limiter  responds  For example if the EQ is set to boost at 6K  or HP filtered at 3K   the limiter becomes more of a De esser  Some  dynamic controllers seem to be extra sensitive to low frequencies and bass  so we filter out low frequencies to prevent  excessive pumping or squashing on bass heavy material  A text book limiter would not have side chain inserts because it is  supposed to accurately limit true signal peaks  The SLAM    s Opto Limiter has a switch that provides some side chain low  freq filtering at 100 and 200 Hz  The 200 Hz setting also boosts about 4 dB at 6K  for a bit of gentle de essing to be the    vo   cal setting        Because there are actually 4 limiters in the box  side chain inserts require 8 jacks  sends and returns   The two top jacks are  sends for the Opto limiter  L amp R  and they are half normalled to the two returns below them  Some may also use these as  alternative outs from the MIC PRE  but the Opto Limiter and  to a lesser degree  the FET Limiter will affect them  but it  avoids the final tube stages     The next 4 jacks are similarly used for the FET Limiter  The Send is an op amp isolated version of the unbalance
59. me can be set up for ridiculously fast releases  10  amp  25 mS  that pretty much guarantee modulation distortion  with lows  which is most often undesirable but can be used as an effect and yet another paint brush  We might caution using ultra fast  release times with bass instruments  but it can be fun on rude drums and blazing solos  There is also a CLIP setting  which introduces  a FET clipper that is fairly round like some low feedback tube circuits overdriven and is a bit reminiscent of speaker distortion  We  wanted to provide a psycho acoustic memory of loud  and this is one way  The CLIP is best suited to enhance a moderately distorted  guitar  of fatten a synth  It is not intended to replace your Marshall  or amp simulator  but can often be used to take them a bit further     9  STEREO LINK  A 3 position toggle  The center position disables stereo linking and is labelled DUAL MONO  All of Manley   s  previous limiter compressors provide a LINK switch and both L amp R controls have to be used for proper operation  Meanwhile  most  other compressors just use the left side while the right side controls become useless  Enough people requested  for us to include this  mode of LINKing  This is the STEREO LINK or up position  Both ways have advantages  The modern    left side only    is convenient   easy and can be clever especially on a plug in  The problem is that almost all implementations mono the L amp R  which means sounds  that are hard right or left are 6 dB less l
60. mod FM  8400  owner   s manual  This is a compressor used by radio stations be   fore they broadcast the music signal  Orban is  by far  the leading  company building broadcast limiters in the world  This eloquent  piece posted on  lt rec audio pro gt  by Robert Orban serves as yet  another warning for those that intend to use hyper compression  on their mix     At this writing  there has been a very disturbing trend in CD  mastering to apply levels of audio processing to CDs formerly  only used by    aggressively processed    radio stations  These  CDs are audibly distorted  sometimes blatantly so  before any  further Optimod processing  The result of 8400 processing can  be to exaggerate this distortion and make these recordings  noticeably unpleasant to listen to over the air     There is very little that a radio station can do with these CDs  other than to use conservative 8400 presets  which will cause  loudness loss that may be undesired in competitive markets   There is a myth in the record industry that applying    radio   style    processing to CDs in mastering will cause them to be  louder or will reduce the audible effects of on air processing    In fact  the opposite is true  these CDs will not be louder on air   but they will be audibly distorted and unpleasant to listen to   lacking punch and clarity     Another unfortunate trend is the tendency to put so much high  frequency energy on the CDs that this cannot possibly survive  the FM pre emphasis de emphasis pr
61. nd LP LIM because the change involves a 3 or 4 second time constant  At  normal levels  the two modes will be similar sounding  LP LIM seems to help in extreme cases  where loudness is the prime goal  Use the Bypass button to check how much dynamic presence  is added     25    The 50  setting mixes some raw input with the post limiter signal  which is often difficult          mastering environment  Because the FET side chain senses right off the output XLR  one immedi   ate indication is significantly deeper gain reduction shown on the LED ladder  but less apparent  limiting to our ears  In some ways  it is like reducing the ratio and threshold  maintaining a similar  output level  It may sound a bit more open and may be useful where lower level passages need to  be raised without killing all transients  Another benefit is that the raw parallel path flows through  less circuitry     The CLIP setting just introduces a soft clip circuit just below  18 dBv or about a dB shy of  where a converter set for  14 of headroom might hit DFS clipping  This could allow one more  safety valve with a bit of room for the digital filters to behave nicely  One may follow that  process with a digital limiter to lift the level a bit closer to DFS if desired     You may notice that the ATTACK switch simulates some of the audible action we associate with  attack controls on compressors but still tends to grab most of the fast peaks  In other words    you get some punch with slower attacks  Like ot
62. nd line  In other words  it required 4 more XLRs and 2 tubes for this box and there is       room  2 channels  amp  24 jacks plus 6 switches already  and gotta draw the damn line somewhere  Why use bantam jacks for side chain inserts   see 8     6  PHANTOM POWER SWITCH  This simply turns      48 regulated volts of phantom power that    rides    on Pin 2 amp 3 of  the BALANCED XLR INPUT  In this case  it is also only ON when you select one of the 3 Mic modes on the SOURCE  switch    However  we do have several warnings    a  Because you can and will have a typical line input often plugged into that XLR and because you can easily switch to  MIC  and because there is a chance some gear is not designed with DC blocking capacitors  or they are rated for less than  48 volts  there is a chance of doing damage to line level gear by    accident     We don   t know of this ever happening but can  imagine that it is possible    b  In general  patching mics with phantom turned on is a habit to break  Mic signals are typically 1 100th of a volt  and  phantom is 48volts so rather huge speaker killing pops are likely   unless monitors  headphones  etc are turned way down or  off  c  For the same reason as above  running mics through patchbays  intermittant cables and corroded XLRs with phantom  turned on may be extra noisy and crackley  If you need phantom  you need good solid connections  The only mics that need  phantom are most FET condensor mics  and some other internally preamplified m
63. oard Power Supply can not be  turned on without it being connected to the SLAM   This is a safety feature  Also  with that exception and the   amp  6 volt supply used for  tube filaments  heaters  all other pins are protected from passing current or a charge stored on power supply capacitors  In other words    its pretty safe  and that you can   t get a shock  and can   t power it up hot but still better to have both power switches off to connect this plug     2  CHANNEL 1 INPUT  This is a Neutrik Combo jack that accepts XLRs  1 4    mono phone plugs  1 4    balanced phone plugs  This  is both the LINE INPUT and the MIC INPUT  Phantom Power  6  is not advised except for some MICs  and in particular FET conden   sor mics and some rare exceptions that require it  If Phantom is ON  turn it off before patching into this jack  or any other mic patch   ing  or at least turn the monitors  headphones  etc down because there will be a loud speaker killing POP  Contrary to urban myth  it   is highly unlikely Phantom Power will damage any mic or cause it to sound different  except during patching  It is a good idea  not to  have Phantom on for LINE inputs  as it might be possible to damage something with the 48 volts if you select MIC  which can enable  phantom      3  CHANNEL 1 OUTPUT  This is a transformer floating balanced  4 dBu output  Pin 2 hot   It is equally happy feeding balanced or  unbalanced inputs but for unbalanced inputs  be sure that the XLR   s Pin 3 is grounded or conn
64. ocess  Although the 8400  loses less high frequency energy than any previous Orban  processor  due to improvements in high frequency limiting   and clipping technology   it is nevertheless no match for CDs  that are mastered so bright that they will curl the vinyl off car  dashboards     We hope that the record industry will come to its senses when  it hears the consequences of these practices on the air  Alas   at this writing  they have shown no signs of doing so     Anyone   please feel free to quote anything I   ve posted on the  board    am trying to bridge the broadcasting and mastering  communities  and the best way is to    get the word out        This subject has suddenly heated up on the Broadcast net  radio tech mailing list  Broadcast engineers have become very  concerned about the clipped and distorted material that they  are being presented with  In fact  one well respected poster  went so far as to propose a minimum peak to average ratio  spec for material that was to be considered    broadcast quality      and proposed that stations reject any material breaking this  spec     The consensus was that radio stations need    radio mastered     mixes  These can have all of the EQ and compression applied  to the standard release  but need to have the peak limiting and  clipping greatly backed off or eliminated  This will retain the  flavor added by the mastering  but not the distortion     In this age of broadband Internet connections  it would be per   fectly feasi
65. ou want to have  fun use both channels with your fave EQ inserted between       First Things First    We only have a few simple suggestions for your first few dates with  the SLAM      1  Don   t rack mount it until you are familiar with the back panel and  have experimented a bit with the jacks and switches that you might  use later  No problem racking it  but this way is easier at first     2  Watch those levels  There is a lot of gain and ways to manipulate  gain on the SLAM   We have seen guys set up 30 dB of boost to a  line signal  30 dB of limiting and were not aware of how drastic those  settings might be because they were unfamiliar with the box  On he  LED meters  one segment   1 dB  approximately   and if you see the  LEDS go half way down  you are hitting 13 dB of limiting which is  generally drastic  Most engineers prefer 6 dB or less limiting  You  need to use your ears  and your eyes  Common mistake     a  Unity gain for line inputs is near 12 00 for the INPUT and  OUTPUT controls  Begin with the ELOP and FET thresholds  fully clockwise  5 oclock   A good starting point     b  To set INPUT levels start with the VU on INPUT and the  VU attenuator at the    OdB    especially as you become familiar  with the SLAM   You have to be aware that practically all the  knobs and switches affect level and gain and that you want to  start off on the right foot  so get the INPUT set first  Then set  Thresholds and Output level  Most early confusion has been  due to level set
66. ow it is used or abused and if something here helps avoid disasters  then we have happy customers     GENERAL NOTES    LOCATION  amp  VENTILATION   The Manley SLAM  must be installed in a stable location with ample ventilation  It is recommended  if this unit  is rack mounted  that you allow enough clearance on the top of the unit such that a constant flow of air can move  through the ventilation holes  Airflow is primarily through the bottom panel vents and out through the top     You should also not mount the SLAM  where there are likely to be strong magnetic fields  such as directly over   or under power amplifiers or large power consuming devices  The other gear   s fuse values tend to give a hint of  whether it draws major power and is likely to create a bigger magnetic field  Magnetic fields might cause a hum in  the SLAM  and occasionally you may need to experiment with placement in the rack to eliminate the hum  In most  situations it should be quiet and trouble free     We also suggest that you get familiar with the back panel switches and jacks before it gets mounted in a rack  If you  have the digital option  experiment with the filter settings  dither  etc to find your favorite settings  then rack it     WATER  amp  MOISTURE  As with any electrical equipment  this equipment should not be used near water or moisture  Beer is OK though     SERVICING   The user should not attempt to service this unit beyond that described in the owner   s manual    Refer all servicin
67. pply  may get reasonably warm  and this is an intentional trade off to keep those magnetic fields minimal    NOTE  The bulk of the power supply will not turn on  including the LED  unless this connector is inserted  because the  SLAM  remote controls the power for most of the Power Supply Unit     2  IEC POWER SOCKET  Use the supplied IEC cable to connect the Power Supply Unit to wall current  This supplied  cable should be the proper type for your country     3  POWER TOGGLE     ON    is marked  Note that BOTH this toggle has to be in the    ON    position and the SLAM   front panel red    POWER    button has to be pushed to turn on the SLAM      4  FUSE  The fuse protects you and the SLAM  in case of a catastrophe  Replace only with the same value and type   Failure to do so voids the warrantee  For 117 volts      mains this fuse is    2 Amp standard 1 4    SLO BLO MDL 2    For 220 volts AC mains this fuse is a    Amp standard 1 4    SLO BLO MDL 1  A blown fuse often looks    blackened      Several blown fuses indicates a problem needing repair  Both the Supply and SLAM  should be returned to the dealer or  Manley Labs for service if the correct value fuses continue to blow     5  VOLTAGE CHANGE OVER SWITCH  This should be set to the proper voltage for you country by the factory  The    switch is marked  and in general a good habit to verify this setting is correct before plugging any new gear in and turning  it on  The carton the SLAM  arrives in will also be marked for 11
68. r    one hand only    when the top is off when working on tube gear     2  Replacing Tubes  The tubes are marked as to their type 12AT7  for voltage gain  and 6414  for line drivers   Another  warning  Tubes get HOT  Let them cool before you attempt to touch them  Wiggle the tube back and forth as you pull it up   If you suspect a tube  you can swap it with the other channel  If the problem follows the tube  you were right  it is that tube   If not  try swapping another pair of tubes  It is a good idea to have a few spare tubes for emergencies as this will fix better  than 90  of most problems     3  Trim Procedures  This is best done by a trained technician with access to specialized instruments like voltmeters and  distortion analysers  Replacing a tube generally does not require a re calibration  Without a distortion analyser  we suggest          touchy    the trims marked THD and BAL  The full factory calibration procedure is on the following page     4  Changing JUMPERS  There are 3 jumpers that allow for a little bit of user modification  The first is in the center and  on the left side of the SideChain board  With this jumper IN  factory set   when STEREO LINK is selected  only the left  side controls are active and are operating on a summed L amp R  mono  signal  With no jumper here  both STEREO LINK  and BOTH  amp  EXT use both sets of controls  This mode is a similar to previous Manley compressors  best for mastering   but inconvenient  The second pair of jumpers   
69. r needs some room to work  The  6 dB VU pad is a hint that maybe this is project is    hyper compressed     especially if is still bending far into the red  It is nice for CD  playback though  9    METERING    The SLAM  has some very comprehensive metering  If you skip  this section  you   ll be back here with the yellow highlighter pen   once you start really using the box     There are both LED bar graphs and standard VU meters  and each  can show a variety of information  Before proceeding further  we  should mention that any peak meters and VU meters should look  different with music and that they are intended for different pur   poses  VU meters are deliberately slower  and are mostly intended  to represent apparent loudness much like the way our ears work   LED peak meters are most often chosen when very fast peak read   ing signals need to be represented  For    standard    VU meters there  is a long list of specs and qualifications  from needle size  color  and ballistics to meter size  color and scaling  Most importantly   VUs have been around a long time and most engineers find them  easiest to interpret and most valid for analog tape  Because peak  meters are fast compared to VUs  transients like drums will look  louder than on VUs  and this is a good thing if we are concerned  with clipping or digital recording     The LED bar graphs are multi color  8   multi mode  4   and  multi purpose  The meter is controlled by a 3 position toggle  switch labeled LED  with MO
70. rd being little  but our advice is to choose where and  how to clip carefully  Usually analog clips better than digital and  usually tube units clip better than solid state  but lots of tube boxes  don   t sound good at all clipping  including some of ours   So  it  requires experimentation   on your time   careful level scaling  and  careful listening to highs  lows  peaks and noise  If you do it right   maybe  make a master with level to rival the top mastering engi   neers  or do it a bit wrong and ruin the project  and have something  you regret for a long time  It is not easy or automatic  and boxes that  claim to do it usually don   t     A large part of the trick to getting a hot loud mix is to watch the  VUs  The idea is not to see how far the needle can bend to the right   but how still and immobile you can get it and still have it sound like  music  Make that needle just sit there while mixing before you limit  and then you just need to use a few dB of limiting and loud it will be   This is not so easy to do  Limiting individual tracks and sub groups  makes it easier  Start with the hottest tracks  which are usually vo   cals  bass and drums  This applies for basic limiters  multi band lim   iters and de essers  Each of these are harder to use effectively on a  mix than an individual track or sub group  On a mix  anything hot  can trigger them and they affect everything  If you de ess a mix  try  not to mess up high hats  acoustic guitars  amp  careful EQ settings  
71. should drop below  02  or    65db  It helps to set it so the plate volts are   about 170vdc Noise and distortion may look similar in amplitude  VU should read between  2 to    2  24 5mVAC 0VU   Boosting gain by 25db  should show smooth clipping   400 80k noise floor   should be below    65 dB   70 typical     7  SOURCE SELECT      Verify Polarity does reverse  and was correct     8  SOURCE SELECT   100 HZ  Verify approximately 3dB down at 100 Hz    9  Raise INPUT 16 dB   154vAC   Change input cable to 1 4    plug and insert it fully into INSTRU    MENT  SOURCE SELECT   DI  OP should read about OVU    10  Pull 1 4    INPUT half way out  Signal should remain near          11  Pull 1 4    OUTPUT half way out  Signal should drop 12 dB   10dbv    12  SOURCE SELECT   LINE  Raise oscillator by 14dB  back to normal  4 dBu   Check BAL    ANCED output for level and distortion  distortion    null    might drift on a new tube     13  If using AP run a frequency Vs level test to verify flat response     18    Limiter Trims    OPTO LIMITER    4 dBu  1 23vAC   1kHZ Oscillator fed into XLR LINE INPUTS    1  VU select   GR  Verify reading close to 0 VU    2  L amp R LIMIT   ON    3  Verify VU   s within 3 dB of zero  Trim ZERO VU GR on Side chain board so that VU   0 with  no gain reduction    4  VU select   O P  Set ELOP LIMIT threshold knob to 9 00 O   clock  VU   s should show some  reduction    5  Adjust OPTO GR trim for 4 dB of limiting    6  VU mode   GR  Adjust opto METER GR trim also 
72. sses and sparse verses that follow  and this can  work better than any electronic or algorithmic    auto    setting     The third problem is not really so bad unless you are attempting  to make the song loud  Releases set too long  When the release is  very long  a transient  however brief  triggers gain reduction  and  a bar later the gain is beginning to rise back to normal  and boom   another transient reduces the level again  You could have turned  down a fader or final gain control and gotten the same effect  The  SLAM  isn   t immune to this  but the slowest release is moderate  at 2 seconds  Some limiters have much longer releases  8 second  releases tend to be safe and almost inaudible  but pulling a fader  down a few dB before the song starts is very  very inaudible and  does about the same thing  Sometimes the best thing  is to ride the  fader  slowly  gently  then add the limiter for what it does best    extremely fast reaction     Vocals can be a prime candidate for limiting  Perhaps the most  used limiter ever for pop vocals is the vintage LA2A  The ELOP  Limiter in the SLAM  recreates that action  and goes a few steps  further with side chain filters and FET limiter  Start with the  ELOP typically on the 100 SC filter  or 200 if esses need a bit of  extra taming   get the INPUT  amp  ELOP LIMITER levels optimum   adjust for an optimum level to    tape     Then maybe sneak in a bit  of FET Limiting  with Attack at VF  RELEASE between   sec and  100 mS     For a M
73. start is  check your settings and meters  It may not be your first guess     GETTING DISTORTION WHEN WE BOOST A LOT  No doubt  The SLAM  by itself should have enough headroom  but it has a lot of available gain  Also the VU attenuator might be at  6dB which hints that the next piece may be getting a  very hot signal  You   re gonna have to turn something down  whether it is the signal feeding the SLAM   the INPUT or OUT   PUT level or the input level of the next device  You might check that the FET RELEASE isn   t set on CLIP too     DC OR SOMETHING AT THE OUTPUT THAT IS INAUDIBLE   The 1 4    unbalanced outputs have a frequency re   sponse that goes way down to below 1 Hz  A little very low frequency noise may be seen as speaker movement when moni   tors are pushed to extreme levels  The XLRs do not exhibit this because the transformers filter below 8 Hz  Also the unbal   anced outputs do not like long cheap high capacitance cable  Occasionally a very high frequency oscillation  200 kHz to 400  kHz  may occur in these conditions  Once again use the XLR outputs  Problem solved     THE GAIN SEEMS OUT OF CALIBRATION   Wait a bit and see if it just needs to warm up  There are two trimmers  inside for adjusting the gain of the two channels up or down a few dB  More than that and you either have a bad cable or bad  tube  In MIC DI modes there is a huge INPUT Level gain range and most pots do have 20  tolerance of position value     Once in a while we get a call from a client with 
74. t effective technique  which has stood the test of time  Part of the reason is the simplicity  of the 2 knob approach and part is the inherant attack and release  times both the electroluminescent panel and photo resistor have and  part is the sound of the tube transformer circuits     There weren   t many companies building pro audio gear in the 60s  and 70s  but we had FET limiters  discrete transistor voltage con   trolled amplifier  VCA  limiters  biased diode limiters and  in gen   eral  all had plenty of color and distortion  One of the best known  FET based limiters is the UREI 1176 which brought more control to  attack and release times and had ratio switches  The first few gen   erations of IC based VCAs were also less than perfect  and VCAs  got a bad name but slowly improved over the years  With cheap easy  to use op amps and VCAs  gear prices dropping  music business  growing  we began to see more gear but somehow the antique 670s         LA2As and 1176s were still in use and preferred     In the early 90   s a few maverick audio manufacturers including us  responded to that knowledge and developed new old technologies   Manley  for example began the ELOP   using a LED photo resis   tor component called a Vactrol and combined it with ICs to drive it  and tube circuits for the audio  Over the years  that opto circuit was  revisited in a discrete transistor Langevin ELOP  variations on the  theme used in the VOXBOX   and once again here in the SLAM      In developin
75. th that old tool called    arranging     Take another listen  to your favorite records and check out how they use many instru   ments to create loud or a few to create quiet or a relief  Listen to  how solos  amp  intro instruments sound great when not covered by  everything else  If it happens to be a recording of great musicians  playing together  listen to how they are their own automatic level  control  This rarely happens with a mostly overdubbed song  but  sometimes a great mix simulates it  Dynamics galore  but a con   stant level  hmmmmm     OPTIMUM SETTINGS    Sorry  we can   t really tell you where to set the knobs for female vo   cals  a strat  or next year   s standard mastering level  It all depends  on the track and taste and the sound you are trying to achieve  We  can give you a few guidelines and share some experience  if that  helps     Limiting can be more audible or difficult than on a well set up  compressor given the same number of dBs of gain reduction  This  is because limiting has a higher ratio and typically has faster at   tacks and releases  Old school engineers advise    to only limit a few  dB on occasional peaks     and this is good advice on most limiters   Hopefully  you will be able to limit a little deeper with the SLAM   without the usual problems  A limiter that shows  say  5 dBs of re   duction  can sound louder than a compressor set for 1 1 5 ratio and  dropping 10 dB almost steadily  Certainly during quiet passages   the compressor will
76. this is covered too     So  the SLAM  is another    GO LOUDER    box  but with a warning  label  We are building guns  not pulling triggers  As always  use your  ears  judgement  and taste  Be careful with this cannon     Hints    Everybody knows that you should make those A to D peak meters go  as hot as possible  digital full scale  but NEVER clip  Well  we have  two urban myths in that statement  Often enough  the next thing  after the A D  filters  plug ins  processors  amp  EQs  requires a few dB  of headroom and they might have a nasty distortion complete with  aliasing if given digital full scale  It is caused by a little ripple in  the pass band of the filter that actually can add a little bumps across  the spectrum  The    better    the filter the lower those bumps will be   but they add up  Most filters need between 1 to 3 dB of headroom   Some MPEG encoders need 6 dB  Don   t feel compelled to hit DFS  if you are working 24 bit and going to master later  Resolution will  be fine and a little headroom may be a nice thing 6 dB below DFS   Save almost DFS levels for mastering 16 bit 44 1 CDs that need  every bit     Yes  most early A Ds sounded horrible when pushed into clipping  and clacked  barked and complained loudly  Most modern A Ds can  be pushed a bit    over    into clipping without obvious distortion and a  few  especially older Ultra Analog based ones  have a pleasant clip   You can certainly get a hotter mix  and more ballz with a little clip   ping  keywo
77. ting        Maximizing    level also implies    minimizing    dynamics and transients   Dynamics and transients are one of the few available    elements    in  sound and music  with the others being pitch  duration and waveform   Very primitive music was just log drums and stretched animal skins   or mostly just transients and dynamics  It   s not hard to make    music     with just transient information  but can you do it with just pitch  like a  technician   s oscillator   or the one of the other two elements  Dynam   ics and transients are musical elements and not the enemy     Maximizing levels very often results in a CD that can exhaust the lis   tener before the first song is over  It can produce an aggressive in your   face constant barrage that might not be appropriate for every project   every song  and every artist  It might be like most effects  best used as  an effect and where it is appropriate  sometimes full tilt and sometimes  lightly  Super squashing might also be going out of fashion  and we see  a trend where producers are avoiding it     Maximizing is best done at the mastering stage rather than during mix   ing  usually  We   ve heard these stories many times     The A amp R guy   or producer or artist  demanded that the engineer use a certain box  to maximize the mix  so he did  but he also supplied the mastering  engineer with an alternative version without that box  The mastering  engineer did his best with both versions  and everybody preferred the  r
78. tings     c  The LED PEAK METER  audio mode  is most useful to  view when setting up the limiters and comparing how much  louder it can get while hitting the same peak level  Compare  your original peak level in Bypass to the level possible with  limiting engaged     3  This is a limiter and limiters generally can create weird distor   tions especially when the gain reduction is deep and releases   are fast  The SLAM  FET limiter has very fast releases so it can  be dangerous  The OPTO is easier to use because the attack  amp   release are slower which is why opto   s have always been popular   Sometimes we want the ease of opto and the speed of FET  and  using the FET gently to    clean up    the overshoots of the opto is  pretty easy too  With the FET limiter alone  some experimenta   tion and critical listening is a must  Different songs and sounds  seem to want different settings and one may often be surprised by  the optimum setting     4  Because the SLAM  is old school analog  the limiters won   t  have the    precision    of a digital limiter that can be easily set to  hold peaks within 0 1 or 0 2 dB of clipping  If you intend to use it  as a brick wall limiter before the A to D converter as a method to  be safe lazy  clever  in an attempt to get hot levels within  2 dB of  digital clipping you may be creating the worst case scenario for  an analog box  It is difficult to set the SLAM  up to do that  It can  be pretty good IF you take the time to carefully set the con
79. trols   Foolproof and easy   no  but if you want    easy     then the safest  way is to accept  2 to  5 dB DFS  23  bits   and use a digital  limiter like an L1 or L2 for the last few dBs  The combination  provides the best of both worlds  Another approach is to try the     CLIP    setting plus the OPTO which is a bit easier and may or  may not be as audible  It might not be worth being obsessed with  hitting   1 dB DFS and focus on the sound instead     5  Once you have found your favorite back panel settings  feel  free to rack mount the SLAM   Yes  you can leave Phantom on  all the time  Old consoles didn   t have phantom switches and it  was always on   no problem        MANLEY SLAM   POWER SUPPLY UNIT    WARNING    TO REDUCE THE RISK OF FIRE OR  ELECTRIC SHOCK  DO NOT EXPOSE THIS UNIT  TO RAIN OR MOISTURE   CAUTION    RISK OF ELECTRIC SHOCK       NOT OPEN  HIGH VOLTAGE    REFER ALL SERVICING TO QUALIFIED PERSONNEL ONLY            LINE VOLTAGE 5  SWITCH                                              POWER             1  POWER MULTI PIN  16 PIN AMP connector that screws into the matching socket on the back of the SLAM   This  should be connected first  Rotate the whole connector until it mates with the socket  then just a turn or so on the outer  ring clockwise will complete the mating  Force will NOT be needed  The cable is 6 feet long and keeping the supply  6 12    away from other gear reduces the possibility of induced hum  though this supply won   t radiate much  The su
80. went beyond A to D clipping and this  is also a good indication of how audible the clip was     So to answer the question    Which one should I trust     the best  answer is    all of them with some interpretation and a grain of  salt     The VU is best to show apparent volume or apparent GR  the  SLAM  peak meters show analog peaks  headroom in the SLAM    and momentary GR that may or may not be audible  External digi   tal peak meters on the recording device should accurately display  available headroom and clipping there  None of them are 100   accurate  nor implicitly perfect  and because each may have differ   ent response characteristics  might look different especially after  a peak and the rates that dots fall and or hold  If this is what you  would like to calibrate  sorry     12    LIMITERS    The first compressors we know of used special tubes designed for  radio and gain control  These        the    remote cut off    type like the  6386 as used in the Fairchild 670  Manley has been making the Vari   able Mu   compressor limiter for many years based on the same  principle     Opto limiters probably began in the early 60   s with      UREI LA2A  which used a small electro luminescent panel driven by audio di   rectly from a tube circuit  This panel was in a light shielded box with  a photo resistor so that when the panel lit  the light shone on the  photo resistor which in turn dropped in resistance and shunted audio  to ground  and reduced its level  Very simple bu
81. y familiar  with the unit  There is a learning curve and no real tricks or settings that seem to be common  Every mix  may be different     Lastly  it is not in any way like the Variable MU and was never intended to be  Each has its own purpose  and special    unique talent     The SLAM  may be easier to describe as a damn fast transient killing secret  weapon  or a tubed  analog L 2 with a buncha features  or maybe just a serious    go louder box    with  huge cajones  Enjoy     27       usng        Aq                        141    491SeWN     14  dn          you               siy                           SALON               MOVUL    EL                  5    MOVaL                              5                             134    1SvV113H   6  91  L    4  z    295   Su  be                      ub L                                                     41X pesuejeg    no                                         ub                        47x                     100           Lad uleyd apis    0000                   w              3   O   NY                     dilo  01   9    06  Gl             uleyd apis    and  no          y  og O  ouow iena O  yur              O                       jeuueyd                             29          25  002 394nOS  ME   ZH OOF SIN      SIN   SIN                     134          apis                      4013 uleu9 apis                         SONILLIS iNVIS ATINVWN ONIHOLS        SILVTdNIL    yno            b   peouejegun              poouejegun
    
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