7.1 Surround as poor-man’s Dolby Atmos 5.1.2?
Posted: Fri Mar 18, 2022 8:20 pm
I have a 5.1 Home Theater system and understand how Bass Management/LFE/Dispersion etc. work, including various digital encoding formats, such as AC-3, Dolby Digital or DTS, and how they’re transmitted over S/PDIF type connections (used to do QA testing for these kinds of setups).
I never tried my hand at mixing or preparing audio for surround applications, though, and just never had more than a 2.1 speaker setup in the studio.
I’m thinking to change that. Originally, I thought I’d go with a basic 5.1 speaker setup… but since the D8B can do 7.1 surround, I was wondering if anybody ever tried to “misuse” channels 7-8 of the surround outs (i.e. as part of the 8 BUS outputs), to use them as the “height channels” that you need a minimum of 2 of, to comply with a Dolby Atmos 5.1.2 setup…?
I realize that I would have to record some rather odd surround panner automation moves, to have a signal that’s activated for channels 7-8 in the surround panner, stay at ear-height when panning, say, from front to back (I think I’d have to go from the front left corner, diagonal to the center/listening position (or probably rather "mid-way" so it doesn't pan towards the L/R center but stays all the way to the left), and from there, diagonal to the left rear corner, to have it behave like a “non-elevated” signal that just pans from front left to rear left.
Or for the reverse case, if I'd WANT a signal to appear further away above a listeners head, I'd just have to pan the signal further to the sides and towards where channels 7+8 are represented in the "7.1 style" surround panner, right?
For the most part, I'm thinking I'd circumvent that by turning channels 7-8 OFF for anything that should NOT appear on the height channel (I expect only a small percentage of channels to actually get routed to the height channels)… so, I’d only have to work around that the D8B doesn’t directly support “3D Panning” in the Atmos sound field, for channels that I DO want to have appear in the height channel. At least in my head, that sounds manageable.
Is anybody already doing that? If so, how does that work out for you?
Further, I understand that you can control the surround panner, by using the channel panner V-Pot and master fader panner V-Pot combined, to adjust the left/right and front/back positioning in “etch-a-sketch” style (the D8B manual calls it that).
I’d find this less than ideal, though.
Does anyone know, if the (software) surround panner in the D8B responds to external MIDI input, and if there’s a hardware MIDI controller (i.e. that has X and Y axis) that is suitable to remote control this? I’m thinking either a joystick type MIDI controller, like on a Korg Wavestation A/D, or a pad-controller like a Korg Chaos pad (or Apple Trackpad, if there’s a way to have it spit out MIDI), or maybe even a regular trackball, if the output could be converted to MIDI (that would be ideal, since I use a trackball, anyway… if that could just be switched to operate in surround panning mode and output MIDI, that would be PERFECT).
If the surround panner DOES respond to MIDI, is it the regular pan parameter, but on different MIDI channels for left/right and front/back? Or does it only respond to device-specific SysEX, like SO MANY things on the D8B?
Anyway… I haven’t ordered the speakers, yet, since I first want to understand what I’m getting myself into, and if my “7.1 as poor man’s 5.1.2 ATMOS” maybe has a severe logic flaw, that others on here could spot easily?
Curious to hear, who actually uses surround with their D8B. I was always curious, but never had the speakers, so there was no point in really clicking around with these features much. But I was VERY positively surprised when I realized that the D8B already has LFE and Dispersion settings for each channel, and about the pretty cool “Snapback” and “Morph” features I just read about, for surround panner animation. This beast still continues to surprise me!
Mostly looking to have fun with trying to mix some music in "basic ATMOS" and don't have high expectations. But sounds like a way to expand my mind and experience a little
Thanks in advance!
I never tried my hand at mixing or preparing audio for surround applications, though, and just never had more than a 2.1 speaker setup in the studio.
I’m thinking to change that. Originally, I thought I’d go with a basic 5.1 speaker setup… but since the D8B can do 7.1 surround, I was wondering if anybody ever tried to “misuse” channels 7-8 of the surround outs (i.e. as part of the 8 BUS outputs), to use them as the “height channels” that you need a minimum of 2 of, to comply with a Dolby Atmos 5.1.2 setup…?
I realize that I would have to record some rather odd surround panner automation moves, to have a signal that’s activated for channels 7-8 in the surround panner, stay at ear-height when panning, say, from front to back (I think I’d have to go from the front left corner, diagonal to the center/listening position (or probably rather "mid-way" so it doesn't pan towards the L/R center but stays all the way to the left), and from there, diagonal to the left rear corner, to have it behave like a “non-elevated” signal that just pans from front left to rear left.
Or for the reverse case, if I'd WANT a signal to appear further away above a listeners head, I'd just have to pan the signal further to the sides and towards where channels 7+8 are represented in the "7.1 style" surround panner, right?
For the most part, I'm thinking I'd circumvent that by turning channels 7-8 OFF for anything that should NOT appear on the height channel (I expect only a small percentage of channels to actually get routed to the height channels)… so, I’d only have to work around that the D8B doesn’t directly support “3D Panning” in the Atmos sound field, for channels that I DO want to have appear in the height channel. At least in my head, that sounds manageable.
Is anybody already doing that? If so, how does that work out for you?
Further, I understand that you can control the surround panner, by using the channel panner V-Pot and master fader panner V-Pot combined, to adjust the left/right and front/back positioning in “etch-a-sketch” style (the D8B manual calls it that).
I’d find this less than ideal, though.
Does anyone know, if the (software) surround panner in the D8B responds to external MIDI input, and if there’s a hardware MIDI controller (i.e. that has X and Y axis) that is suitable to remote control this? I’m thinking either a joystick type MIDI controller, like on a Korg Wavestation A/D, or a pad-controller like a Korg Chaos pad (or Apple Trackpad, if there’s a way to have it spit out MIDI), or maybe even a regular trackball, if the output could be converted to MIDI (that would be ideal, since I use a trackball, anyway… if that could just be switched to operate in surround panning mode and output MIDI, that would be PERFECT).
If the surround panner DOES respond to MIDI, is it the regular pan parameter, but on different MIDI channels for left/right and front/back? Or does it only respond to device-specific SysEX, like SO MANY things on the D8B?
Anyway… I haven’t ordered the speakers, yet, since I first want to understand what I’m getting myself into, and if my “7.1 as poor man’s 5.1.2 ATMOS” maybe has a severe logic flaw, that others on here could spot easily?
Curious to hear, who actually uses surround with their D8B. I was always curious, but never had the speakers, so there was no point in really clicking around with these features much. But I was VERY positively surprised when I realized that the D8B already has LFE and Dispersion settings for each channel, and about the pretty cool “Snapback” and “Morph” features I just read about, for surround panner animation. This beast still continues to surprise me!
Mostly looking to have fun with trying to mix some music in "basic ATMOS" and don't have high expectations. But sounds like a way to expand my mind and experience a little
Thanks in advance!