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Hi - I have a Tascam "CD-VTi Portable vocal trainer". I have referred to the instruction booklet many times but cannot find it at present. I found myself with a problem where the voice on the CD was singing very slowly. I would like to have the instructions which explain "loop", "I/O", "effect" and "voice changer". Can I find the instructions on this website? Thanks, Marcelle (Sydney)
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VERY carefully clean the lens with a QTip and 99% isoprophyl alcohol. Use ONLY 99% and it can be a bit hard to find.
Be careful to NOT snag the QTip cotton on the carriage or parts holding the lens... clean ONLY the lens, very gently. Let dry thouroughly before trying it again.
The easiest way to record using an external Lexicon effects unit (without an external mixer) is to connect your mic onto one of the 2488's inputs and assign that input to a channel strip (track). You should have the 2488 sends (output) going to the Lexicon's inputs. Then connect the Lexicon outputs back into another set of inputs on your 2488 and assign those inputs to two empty channel strips (tracks).
Then you will have to take that channel that has your mic input assigned to it and press send and set the levels there to send the signal out the sends (to the Lexicon).
Now you have a channel strip assigned to the mic input which contains your dry signal, and you have the two inputs returning from the Lexicon which contains your wet or effected signal.
You then have some options. You can control the amount of effected signal you hear while recording by adjusting the faders of the two wet tracks and you can either record the dry signal or the wet signal (or both) onto separate tracks.
Typically when recording the singer will want to hear an effect (say reverb) on his voice, but the engineer wants to record only the dry track at recording time (because effects can always be added later, but they can't be taken out). To accomplish this you would use the setup above, but only arm the mic input track for recording. In this way the singer hears the reverb, but only the dry vocals get recorded and the engineer can add reverb to that track again later as desired (and mix it back with the dry vocal etc).
On the other hand if you want to record only the effected signal you would simply arm the two channels to which the inputs coming back from your Lexicon are assigned for recording. This will get you a recording of the effected signal only.
Hope this helps you do what you are trying to do.
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